4.0 Article

Subterranean carbon flows from source to stygofauna: a case study on the atyid shrimp Stygiocaris stylifera (Holthuis, 1960) from Barrow Island (WA)

Journal

ISOTOPES IN ENVIRONMENTAL AND HEALTH STUDIES
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 247-257

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10256016.2022.2071873

Keywords

Biofilm; carbon-13; carbon-14; groundwater ecology; hydrocarbons; isotope ecology; nitrogen-15; stygofauna; organic matter; trophic webs

Funding

  1. Chevron Australia
  2. Stantec Australia Pty Ltd.

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Groundwater biota are crucial for subterranean ecosystems, but functional ecological information is limited. This study focuses on the trophic plasticity of an endemic shrimp species in a low-nutrient habitat associated with natural oil seepage. The results show changes in trophic positions and carbon flows, confirming the potential for trophic flexibility in groundwater invertebrates.
Groundwater biota are crucial for the ecological functioning of subterranean ecosystems. However, while knowledge of the taxonomic diversity of groundwater invertebrates (stygofauna) is increasing, functional ecological information is still limited. Here, we investigate seldom empirically tested assumptions around stygofaunal trophic plasticity in coping with oligotrophic habitats. We focus on Barrow Island (Western Australia), an ideal natural laboratory due to the occurrence of natural oil seeps in association with aquifers. The trophic position and food source use of the endemic atyid shrimp Stygiocaris stylifera (Holthuis, 1960) were assessed via delta C-13 and delta N-15 stable isotope analysis (SIA). Background information on the environmental conditions was gathered through hydrochemical data and delta C-13 SIA combined with C-14 data from dissolved inorganic/organic carbon and particulate organic carbon from groundwater samples. Our results indicate carbon enrichment in proximity to the natural oil seepage coupled with changes in trophic positions of S. stylifera from higher consumers/predators to biofilm grazers/decomposers. These results are consistent with an increased involvement of hydrocarbon seeps and associated microbial communities in the carbon flows and confirm potential for the trophic flexibility in stygofauna. Further investigations involving other trophic groups will help elucidate the functioning of the ecosystems at a community level.

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