4.4 Article

Trophic guilds of generalist feeders in soil animal communities as indicated by stable isotope analysis (15N/14N)

Journal

BULLETIN OF ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 100, Issue 5, Pages 511-520

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0007485309990587

Keywords

soil animal community; trophic level; N-15; trophic level enrichment; detritivores; predators

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

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We investigated if the commonly used aggregation of organisms into trophic guilds, such as detritivores and predators, in fact represent distinct trophic levels. Soil arthropods of a forest-meadow transect were ascribed a priori to trophic guilds (herbivores, detritivores, predators and necrovores), which are often used as an equivalent to trophic levels. We analysed natural variations in N-15/N-14 ratios of the animals in order to investigate the trophic similarity of organisms within (a priori defined) trophic guilds. Using trophic guilds as an equivalent to trophic level, the assumed stepwise enrichment of N-15 by 3.4% per trophic level did not apply to detritivores; they were only enriched in N-15 by on average 1.5% compared to litter materials. Predators on average were enriched in N-15 by 3.5% compared to detritivores. Within detritvores and predators delta N-15 signatures varied markedly, indicating that these trophic guilds are dominated by generalist feeders which form a gradient of organisms feeding on different resources. The results indicate that commonly used trophic guilds, in particular detritivores and predators, do not represent trophic levels but consist of subguilds, i.e. subsets of organisms differing in resource utilization. In particular, in soil and litter food webs where trophic level omnivory is common, the use of distinct trophic levels may be inappropriate. Guilds of species delineated by natural variations of stable isotope ratios are assumed to more adequately represent the structure of litter and soil food webs allowing a more detailed understanding of their functioning.

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