4.7 Article

Intraspecific variation and energy channel coupling within a Chilean kelp forest

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3198

Keywords

C-13; compound‐ specific stable isotope analysis; essential amino acids; marine ecology; multichanneling; multiple energetic pathways; stable isotopes; upwelling

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF [DGE-1418062]
  2. UNM Latin American Iberian Institute
  3. Department of Biology
  4. Center for Stable Isotopes
  5. NEXER MINEDUC - Universidad de Antofagasta (UA) [ANT1856]
  6. FONDECYT [1151515, 1191452]
  7. Nucleo Milenio INVASAL - Chile's government program, Iniciativa Cientifica Milenio from the Ministerio de Economia, Fomento y Turismo

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Our study demonstrates how advanced isotopic techniques can characterize energy flow dynamics in coastal food webs, showing evidence of multichannel feeding within a kelp forest consumer community in northern Chile. Our findings suggest the potential for investigating similar patterns in other ecosystems, highlighting the importance of understanding multichannel feeding in nearshore communities.
The widespread importance of variable types of primary production, or energy channels, to consumer communities has become increasingly apparent. However, the mechanisms underlying this multichannel feeding remain poorly understood, especially for aquatic ecosystems that pose unique logistical constraints given the diversity of potential energy channels. Here, we use bulk tissue isotopic analysis along with carbon isotope (delta C-13) analysis of individual amino acids to characterize the relative contribution of pelagic and benthic energy sources to a kelp forest consumer community in northern Chile. We measured bulk tissue delta C-13 and delta N-15 for >120 samples; of these we analyzed delta C-13 values of six essential amino acids (EAA) from nine primary producer groups (n = 41) and 11 representative nearshore consumer taxa (n = 56). Using EAA delta C-13 data, we employed linear discriminant analysis (LDA) to assess how distinct EAA delta C-13 values were between local pelagic (phytoplankton/particulate organic matter), and benthic (kelps, red algae, and green algae) endmembers. With this model, we were able to correctly classify nearly 90% of producer samples to their original groupings, a significant improvement on traditional bulk isotopic analysis. With this EAA isotopic library, we then generated probability distributions for the most important sources of production for each individual consumer and species using a bootstrap-resampling LDA approach. We found evidence for multichannel feeding within the community at the species level. Invertebrates tended to focus on either pelagic or benthic energy, deriving 13-67% of their EAA from pelagic sources. In contrast, mobile (fish) taxa at higher trophic levels used more equal proportions of each channel, ranging from 19% to 47% pelagically derived energy. Within a taxon, multichannel feeding was a result of specialization among individuals in energy channel usage, with 37 of 56 individual consumers estimated to derive >80% of their EAA from a single channel. Our study reveals how a cutting-edge isotopic technique can characterize the dynamics of energy flow in coastal food webs, a topic that has historically been difficult to address. More broadly, our work provides a mechanism as to how multichannel feeding may occur in nearshore communities, and we suggest this pattern be investigated in additional ecosystems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available