Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting

Abstract Marine food webs are highly compartmentalized, and characterizing the trophic niches among consumers is important for predicting how impact from human activities affects the structuring and functioning of marine food webs. Biomarkers such as bulk stable isotopes have proven to be powerful t...

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Main Authors: Thomas Larsen, Thomas Hansen, Jan Dierking
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-07-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6502
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spelling doaj-5ea46b65e41c4959b6f57dcfadd0e2662021-04-02T12:31:39ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-07-0110147768778210.1002/ece3.6502Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprintingThomas Larsen0Thomas Hansen1Jan Dierking2Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History Jena GermanyGEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel Kiel GermanyGEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel Kiel GermanyAbstract Marine food webs are highly compartmentalized, and characterizing the trophic niches among consumers is important for predicting how impact from human activities affects the structuring and functioning of marine food webs. Biomarkers such as bulk stable isotopes have proven to be powerful tools to elucidate trophic niches, but they may lack in resolution, particularly when spatiotemporal variability in a system is high. To close this gap, we investigated whether carbon isotope (δ13C) patterns of essential amino acids (EAAs), also termed δ13CAA fingerprints, can characterize niche differentiation in a highly dynamic marine system. Specifically, we tested the ability of δ13CAA fingerprints to differentiate trophic niches among six functional groups and ten individual species in the Baltic Sea. We also tested whether fingerprints of the common zooplanktivorous fishes, herring and sprat, differ among four Baltic Sea regions with different biochemical conditions and phytoplankton assemblages. Additionally, we investigated how these results compared to bulk C and N isotope data for the same sample set. We found significantly different δ13CAA fingerprints among all six functional groups. Species differentiation was in comparison less distinct, due to partial convergence of the species' fingerprints within functional groups. Herring and sprat displayed region‐specific δ13CAA fingerprints indicating that this approach could be used as a migratory marker. Niche metrics analyses showed that bulk isotope data had a lower power to differentiate between trophic niches than δ13CAA fingerprinting. We conclude that δ13CAA fingerprinting has a strong potential to advance our understanding of ecological niches, and trophic linkages from producers to higher trophic levels in dynamic marine systems. Given how management practices of marine resources and habitats are reshaping the structure and function of marine food webs, implementing new and powerful tracer methods are urgently needed to improve the knowledge base for policy makers.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6502Baltic Seacarbon stable isotopesdiet partitioningfish dietsfood web reconstructionmigration tracking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Larsen
Thomas Hansen
Jan Dierking
spellingShingle Thomas Larsen
Thomas Hansen
Jan Dierking
Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting
Ecology and Evolution
Baltic Sea
carbon stable isotopes
diet partitioning
fish diets
food web reconstruction
migration tracking
author_facet Thomas Larsen
Thomas Hansen
Jan Dierking
author_sort Thomas Larsen
title Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting
title_short Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting
title_full Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting
title_fullStr Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13C fingerprinting
title_sort characterizing niche differentiation among marine consumers with amino acid δ13c fingerprinting
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Marine food webs are highly compartmentalized, and characterizing the trophic niches among consumers is important for predicting how impact from human activities affects the structuring and functioning of marine food webs. Biomarkers such as bulk stable isotopes have proven to be powerful tools to elucidate trophic niches, but they may lack in resolution, particularly when spatiotemporal variability in a system is high. To close this gap, we investigated whether carbon isotope (δ13C) patterns of essential amino acids (EAAs), also termed δ13CAA fingerprints, can characterize niche differentiation in a highly dynamic marine system. Specifically, we tested the ability of δ13CAA fingerprints to differentiate trophic niches among six functional groups and ten individual species in the Baltic Sea. We also tested whether fingerprints of the common zooplanktivorous fishes, herring and sprat, differ among four Baltic Sea regions with different biochemical conditions and phytoplankton assemblages. Additionally, we investigated how these results compared to bulk C and N isotope data for the same sample set. We found significantly different δ13CAA fingerprints among all six functional groups. Species differentiation was in comparison less distinct, due to partial convergence of the species' fingerprints within functional groups. Herring and sprat displayed region‐specific δ13CAA fingerprints indicating that this approach could be used as a migratory marker. Niche metrics analyses showed that bulk isotope data had a lower power to differentiate between trophic niches than δ13CAA fingerprinting. We conclude that δ13CAA fingerprinting has a strong potential to advance our understanding of ecological niches, and trophic linkages from producers to higher trophic levels in dynamic marine systems. Given how management practices of marine resources and habitats are reshaping the structure and function of marine food webs, implementing new and powerful tracer methods are urgently needed to improve the knowledge base for policy makers.
topic Baltic Sea
carbon stable isotopes
diet partitioning
fish diets
food web reconstruction
migration tracking
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6502
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