Publication Abstract
- Title
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Explaining isotope trophic-step fractionation: why herbivorous fish are different.
- Publication Abstract
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Explaining isotope trophic-step fractionation: why herbivorous fish are different.
A.C. Mill, J.K. Pinnegar* and N.V.C. Polunin
An assumed constant trophic fractionation of 15N/14N between consumer and diet (usually 3.4‰ for diet-muscle tissue spacing) allows inferences to be made about feeding interactions and trophic level in food web studies. However, considerable variability surrounds this constant, which may conceal subtle differences about the trophodynamics of consumers.
The feeding ecologies of herbivores and carnivores differ in terms of diet quality (in C: N terms) and food processing mechanisms, which may affect fractionation.
We present a new model that explores how consumer feeding rates, excretion rates and diet quality determine the 15N/14N ratios in the consumer’s tissues and hence influence the magnitude of trophic fractionation.
Three herbivorous reef fish Acanthurus sohal, Zebrasoma xanthurum and Pomacentrus arabicus were chosen as study organisms. Empirical estimates of diet-tissue fractionation were made in the field and model parameters were derived from feeding observations and literature data.
The trophic fractionation values of A. sohal, Z. xanthurum and P. arabicus were 4.69, 4.47 and 5.25‰ by empirical measurement and 4.41, 4.30 and 5.68‰ by model, indicating that herbivores have a higher trophic fractionation than the currently accepted value of 3.4‰.
The model was most sensitive to the excretion rate, which may differ between herbivores and carnivorous animals. The model is the first to determine isotope signatures of a consumer’s diet mixture without applying a constant fractionation value.
Reference
A.C. Mill, J.K. Pinnegar* and N.V.C. Polunin (2007) Explaining isotope trophic-step fractionation: why herbivorous fish are different. Functional Ecology, 21: 1137-1145.
- Publication Internet Address of the Data
- Publication Authors
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A.C. Mill, J.K. Pinnegar* and N.V.C. Polunin
- Publication Date
- November 2007
- Publication Reference
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Functional Ecology, 21: 1137-1145.
- Publication DOI: https://doi.org/