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Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

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Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture.
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Page 1: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis

Susy Honig

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Page 2: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

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Page 3: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope Analysis can be used for:• Intra- and inter-specific variation in trophic

levels

• Predator-prey size ratios

• Transfer efficiency

• Food chain length

• Human Impacts

Page 4: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Principle Assumption of Sized-based analyses

• Body size accounts for a large proportion of the variance in trophic level compared with species identity

• Is this a valid assumption?

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Page 5: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope Analysis can be used for:• Intra- and inter-specific variation in trophic

levels

• Predator-prey size ratios

• Transfer efficiency

• Food chain length

• Human Impacts

Page 6: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

• No significant relationship between species identity and

15N value (trophic level) in a North Sea food web

• On the other hand, trophic level increases continuously with body mass

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Page 7: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope Analysis can be used for:• Intra- and inter-specific variation in trophic

levels

• Predator-prey size ratios

• Transfer efficiency

• Food chain length

• Human Impacts

Page 8: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Predator Prey Mass Ratios

• PPMR= ratio of the mean body mass of predators in a food web to the mean body mass of their prey=n(/b)

Where = mean PPMR, n = the base of lognbody mass class, = the fractionation of 15N, and b = the slope of the relationship between 15N and lognbody mass class.

• Important b/c can predict strength of biotic interactions, food chain length, and pathways of energy transfer

Page 9: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope Analysis can be used for:• Intra- and inter-specific variation in trophic

levels

• Predator-prey size ratios

• Transfer efficiency

• Food chain length

• Human Impacts

Page 10: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Transfer Efficiency

• TE = how much prey production is converted into predator production =P+1 / P

• P= B x (P/M)– P is production in each body mass class

– B is biomass

– P/M is individual biomass production (can be calculated if you know body mass)

• TE calculated from slope of relationship between lognP (y) and 15N (x) = nb

Page 11: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope Analysis can be used for:• Intra- and inter-specific variation in trophic

levels

• Predator-prey size ratios

• Transfer efficiency

• Food chain length

• Human Impacts

Page 12: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Food Chain Length• Heaviest predator

rarely fed at highest trophic level

• Longest food chains supported predators with intermediate body size

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Page 13: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Food Chain Length, cont.

• Trophic level increases with body mass, but you can’t calculate the maximum possible trophic level in a community (ie the food chain length) just using the largest individual

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Page 14: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Food Chain Length

• PPMR is smaller in longer food chains and less variable environments

• Longer food chains with smaller PPMR ratios are often more stable

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Page 15: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope Analysis can be used for:• Intra- and inter-specific variation in trophic

levels

• Predator-prey size ratios

• Transfer efficiency

• Food chain length

• Human Impacts

Page 16: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Human Impacts: Fishing

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•Reduction in biomass of large fishes in North Sea compared to predicted baseline (using PPMR and TE)•Good tool for assessing fishingimpacts, especially in the absenceof historical baseline data

Page 17: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

What affects 15N?• Environmental Conditions

• Physiology

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Page 18: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Take-Home Message

• Size-based Nitrogen Stable Isotope analysis is a good tool for macroecological research, especially in marine food webs

• Assumptions about base 15N levels should be made carefully (account for environmental conditions and food availability)

Page 19: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

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Page 20: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Quick Summary

• Loggerheads can be in immature neritic stage for >20 years

• During this period, have mostly carnivorous diet, but lots of variation (mollusks, crustaceans, even fish from discarded bycatch)

• Used 15N and 13C to describe diet composition of immature loggerheads and see if variation in growth rate was related to inter-individual variation in diet selectivity

Page 21: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

More on Turtles…

• Analyzed 77 blood plasma samples from 49 individual turtles

• Also analyzed potential prey (blue crab, whelk, spider crab, horseshoe crab, cannonball jellies, and two locally important fish species)

• Measured growth rates of 15 turtles • Used mixing model to generate and explain

potential source contribution to diet

Page 22: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Isosource Model Results

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Page 23: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

• Lots of variation in 15N and 13C values for immature loggerheads, but no significant relationship with body size or growth rates

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Page 24: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

The Big Picture

• Isotope signatures show us that immature loggerhead turtle growth rates were not related to the trophic level in which individuals fed

• Diet composition was variable, but blue crab and whelk (and not fish) are important components

Page 25: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

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Page 26: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

• Differences in 15N and 13C values within and between individual otters can indicate the extent of prey specialization and conspecific niche partitioning

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Page 27: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

• High degree of between individual variation (BIC) ~50%

• Less within individual variation (WIC) ~30%

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Page 28: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Seasonal Variability in diet composition within individuals

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Page 29: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

Big Picture• Looks like otters

are prey specialists, but diet may be affected by resource availability and season

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Page 30: Marine Ecology Applications for Stable Isotope Analysis Susy Honig.

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