4.7 Article

Abyssal deposit feeders are secondary consumers of detritus and rely on nutrition derived from microbial communities in their guts

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-91927-4

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  1. Marie Curie-COFUND Grant from the Government of Principado de Asturias [ACA17-07]
  2. European Commission
  3. NSF [1829612]
  4. Division Of Ocean Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [1829612] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The detrital-based food web in abyssal plains relies on deposit feeders as secondary consumers, with their gut contents mainly consisting of living biomass of heterotrophic prokaryotes. The guts of deposit feeders act as hotspots of organic matter, forming a unique food source distinct from the surrounding surface detritus, and increasing the food-chain length in detritus-based ecosystems.
Trophic ecology of detrital-based food webs is still poorly understood. Abyssal plains depend entirely on detritus and are among the most understudied ecosystems, with deposit feeders dominating megafaunal communities. We used compound-specific stable isotope ratios of amino acids (CSIA-AA) to estimate the trophic position of three abundant species of deposit feeders collected from the abyssal plain of the Northeast Pacific (Station M;similar to 4000 m depth), and compared it to the trophic position of their gut contents and the surrounding sediments. Our results suggest that detritus forms the base of the food web and gut contents of deposit feeders have a trophic position consistent with primary consumers and are largely composed of a living biomass of heterotrophic prokaryotes. Subsequently, deposit feeders are a trophic level above their gut contents making them secondary consumers of detritus on the abyssal plain. Based on delta C-13 values of essential amino acids, we found that gut contents of deposit feeders are distinct from the surrounding surface detritus and form a unique food source, which was assimilated by the deposit feeders primarily in periods of low food supply. Overall, our results show that the guts of deposit feeders constitute hotspots of organic matter on the abyssal plain that occupy one trophic level above detritus, increasing the food-chain length in this detritus-based ecosystem.

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