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Dietary and seasonal variability in trophic relations at the base of the North Sea pelagic food web revealed by stable isotope and fatty acid analysis

Abstract

A two-dimensional biomarker approach including fatty acids and stable isotopes of seston and copepods was applied to examine how the variability at the base of the food web affects trophic interactions between primary producers and copepod consumers over a sampling period of two years. We investigated how the composition of the seston affected feeding behaviour by analysing the fatty acid and stable isotope signals of the copepods Calanus helgolandicus, Acartia spp., Centropages spp. and Temora longicornis at Helgoland Roads, North Sea. Our results indicate that the relative contributions of autotrophic and heterotrophic fractions in the seston determined the stable isotope signal of the seston and hence the δ15N of copepods. Our findings show that the combination of stable isotope and fatty acid analyses provides an ideal tool to address the complexity of trophic relations in planktonic food-webs and to define relative trophic position and feeding preferences of e.g. copepods. Defining accurate baselines from bulk seston samples containing a mixture of auto- and heterotroph protist communities still remains a challenge when defining lower food-web dynamics in natural plankton communities.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Schoo Katherina L.
  • Boersma Maarten
  • Arne Malzahn
  • Loeder Martin G.J.
  • Wiltshire Karen H.
  • Nicole Aberle-Malzahn

Affiliation

  • Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research
  • GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
  • University of Bremen
  • SINTEF Ocean / Fisheries and New Biomarine Industry
  • University of Bayreuth
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2018

Published in

Journal of Sea Research

ISSN

1385-1101

Publisher

Elsevier

Volume

141

Page(s)

61 - 70

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