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Fish stable isotope community structure of a Bahamian coral reef

Marine Biology, ISSN: 1432-1793, Vol: 166, Issue: 12
2019
  • 15
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 57
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 104
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    15
    • Citation Indexes
      15
  • Captures
    57
  • Social Media
    104
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      104
      • Facebook
        104

Article Description

Stable isotopes have provided important insight into the trophic structure and interaction in many ecosystems, but to date have scarcely been applied to the complex food webs of coral reefs. We sampled white muscle tissues from the fish species composing 80% of the biomass in the 4–512 g body mass range at Cape Eleuthera (the Bahamas) in order to examine isotopic niches characterised by δC and δN data and explore whether fish body size is a driver of trophic position based on δN. We found the planktivore isotopic niche was distinct from those of the other trophic guilds suggesting the unique isotopic baseline of pelagic production sources. Other trophic guilds showed some level of overlap among them especially in the δC value which is attributable to source omnivory. Surprising features of the isotopic niches included the benthivore Halichoeres pictus, herbivores Acanthurus coeruleus and Coryphopterus personatus and omnivore Thalassoma bifasciatum being close to the planktivore guild, while the piscivore Aulostomus maculatus came within the omnivore and herbivore ellipses. These characterisations contradicted the simple trophic categories normally assigned to these species. δN tended to increase with body mass in most species, and at community level, the linear δN–log body mass relationship pointing to a mean predator–prey mass ratio of 1047:1 and a relatively long food chain compared with studies in other aquatic systems. This first demonstration of a positive δN–body mass relationship in a coral reef fish community suggested that the Cape Eleuthera coral reef food web was likely supported by one main pathway and bigger reef fishes tended to feed at higher trophic position. Such finding is similar to other marine ecosystems (e.g. North Sea).

Bibliographic Details

Yiou Zhu; Steven P. Newman; William D. K. Reid; Nicholas V. C. Polunin

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Environmental Science

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