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Stable isotopes demonstrate seasonally stable benthic‐pelagic coupling as newly fixed nutrients are rapidly transferred through food chains in an estuarine fish community

Stable isotopes demonstrate seasonally stable benthic‐pelagic coupling as newly fixed nutrients are rapidly transferred through food chains in an estuarine fish community
Stable isotopes demonstrate seasonally stable benthic‐pelagic coupling as newly fixed nutrients are rapidly transferred through food chains in an estuarine fish community
Seasonal differences in the availability of resources potentially result in the food web architecture also varying through time. Stable isotope analyses are a logistically simple but powerful tool for inferring trophic interactions and food web structure, but relatively few studies quantify seasonal variations in the food web structure or nutrient flux across multiple trophic levels. We determined the temporal dynamics in stable isotope compositions (carbon, nitrogen and sulphur) of a fish community from a highly seasonal, temperate estuary sampled monthly over a full annual cycle. Sulphur isotope values in fish tissues discriminated among consumers exploiting pelagic and benthic resources but showed no seasonal variation. This implied limited change in the relative consumption of pelagic and benthic resources by the fish community over the study period despite major seasonal changes in phytoplankton biomass. Conversely, carbon and nitrogen isotope values exhibited seasonality marked by the commencement of the spring phytoplankton bloom and peak chlorophyll concentration, with δ13C values following expected trends in phytoplankton growth physiology and variation in δ15N values coinciding with changes in major nitrogen sources to plankton between nitrate and ammonium. Isotope shifts in fish muscle were detected within 2 weeks of the peak spring phytoplankton bloom, suggesting a rapid trophic transfer of carbon and nitrogen along food chains within the estuarine food web during periods of high production. Therefore we caution against the assumption that temporal averaging effectively dampens isotopic variability in tissues of higher trophic-level animals in highly dynamic ecosystems, such as temperate estuaries. This work highlights how stable isotope analyses can be combined with environmental data to gain a broader understanding of ecosystem functioning, while emphasising the need for temporally appropriate sampling in stable isotope-based studies.
0022-1112
Cobain, Matthew R.D.
af8b6ff0-0fb7-4e82-9b21-15c10f8abded
McGill, Rona A.R.
027e4906-0c76-491e-a403-5f6388218fee
Trueman, Clive N.
d00d3bd6-a47b-4d47-89ae-841c3d506205
Cobain, Matthew R.D.
af8b6ff0-0fb7-4e82-9b21-15c10f8abded
McGill, Rona A.R.
027e4906-0c76-491e-a403-5f6388218fee
Trueman, Clive N.
d00d3bd6-a47b-4d47-89ae-841c3d506205

Cobain, Matthew R.D., McGill, Rona A.R. and Trueman, Clive N. (2022) Stable isotopes demonstrate seasonally stable benthic‐pelagic coupling as newly fixed nutrients are rapidly transferred through food chains in an estuarine fish community. Journal of Fish Biology. (doi:10.1111/jfb.15005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Seasonal differences in the availability of resources potentially result in the food web architecture also varying through time. Stable isotope analyses are a logistically simple but powerful tool for inferring trophic interactions and food web structure, but relatively few studies quantify seasonal variations in the food web structure or nutrient flux across multiple trophic levels. We determined the temporal dynamics in stable isotope compositions (carbon, nitrogen and sulphur) of a fish community from a highly seasonal, temperate estuary sampled monthly over a full annual cycle. Sulphur isotope values in fish tissues discriminated among consumers exploiting pelagic and benthic resources but showed no seasonal variation. This implied limited change in the relative consumption of pelagic and benthic resources by the fish community over the study period despite major seasonal changes in phytoplankton biomass. Conversely, carbon and nitrogen isotope values exhibited seasonality marked by the commencement of the spring phytoplankton bloom and peak chlorophyll concentration, with δ13C values following expected trends in phytoplankton growth physiology and variation in δ15N values coinciding with changes in major nitrogen sources to plankton between nitrate and ammonium. Isotope shifts in fish muscle were detected within 2 weeks of the peak spring phytoplankton bloom, suggesting a rapid trophic transfer of carbon and nitrogen along food chains within the estuarine food web during periods of high production. Therefore we caution against the assumption that temporal averaging effectively dampens isotopic variability in tissues of higher trophic-level animals in highly dynamic ecosystems, such as temperate estuaries. This work highlights how stable isotope analyses can be combined with environmental data to gain a broader understanding of ecosystem functioning, while emphasising the need for temporally appropriate sampling in stable isotope-based studies.

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Journal of Fish Biology - 2022 - Cobain - Stable isotopes demonstrate seasonally stable benthic‐pelagic coupling as newly - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 January 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 January 2022
Published date: 25 February 2022

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Local EPrints ID: 491036
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491036
ISSN: 0022-1112
PURE UUID: 8e36e75a-3787-4102-b95e-beb9ef87a8ae
ORCID for Matthew R.D. Cobain: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1701-3986
ORCID for Clive N. Trueman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4995-736X

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Date deposited: 11 Jun 2024 16:43
Last modified: 12 Jun 2024 01:39

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Contributors

Author: Matthew R.D. Cobain ORCID iD
Author: Rona A.R. McGill

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