Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds

Peracarid crustaceans and amphipods in particular are an important group in the Southern Ocean and one of the most diverse in the macrozoobenthos (Jazdzewski et al., 1991). As a part of a multidisciplinary study of the amphipods ecological roles in Antarctic benthic systems (De Broyer et al., 2001,...

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Main Authors: Nyssen, Fabienne, Graeve, Martin
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/71717
id ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/71717
record_format openpolar
spelling ftorbi:oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/71717 2024-04-21T07:52:29+00:00 Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds Nyssen, Fabienne Graeve, Martin 2003 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/71717 en eng https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/71717 info:hdl:2268/71717 International symposium IBMANT-ANDEEP, Ushuaia, Argentina [AR], October 2003 Life sciences Zoology Sciences du vivant Zoologie conference paper not in proceedings http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18cp info:eu-repo/semantics/conferencePaper 2003 ftorbi 2024-03-27T14:43:21Z Peracarid crustaceans and amphipods in particular are an important group in the Southern Ocean and one of the most diverse in the macrozoobenthos (Jazdzewski et al., 1991). As a part of a multidisciplinary study of the amphipods ecological roles in Antarctic benthic systems (De Broyer et al., 2001, Nyssen et al., 2002), about 150 specimens belonging to 25 species of 10 of the most common amphipod families occurring in the Southern Ocean have been involved in this study of amphipod trophic patterns. Beside “classical” stomach content analysis or field observations, the use of naturally occurring stable isotopes of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) has recently provided new insights into food web ecology (Hobson & Welch, 1992, Lepoint et al., 2000). This method is based on the direct relationship established between the isotopic signature of an organism and that of its preys (DeNiro & Epstein, 1978, 1981, Peterson & Fry, 1987). Nitrogen-15 typically shows a step-wise increase with trophic level within a food chain (Cabana & Rasmussen, 1994). Closer to the value of the diet, carbon-13 is preferentially used to assess the relative proportion of potential primary sources in a trophic web (ex.: pelagic vs benthic contribution to food intake) (Dauby et al., 1998, Hobson et al., 1995). Furthermore, for several species, the lipid signature – which has already been used successfully to help understand marine trophodynamics (Graeve et al., 2001, Nelson et al., 2001, Phleger et al. 1998) – and more particularly the fatty acid composition has been investigated as trophic biomarkers to reveal more precisely to which trophic guild they belong to. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Liège: ORBi (Open Repository and Bibliography)
op_collection_id ftorbi
language English
topic Life sciences
Zoology
Sciences du vivant
Zoologie
spellingShingle Life sciences
Zoology
Sciences du vivant
Zoologie
Nyssen, Fabienne
Graeve, Martin
Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
topic_facet Life sciences
Zoology
Sciences du vivant
Zoologie
description Peracarid crustaceans and amphipods in particular are an important group in the Southern Ocean and one of the most diverse in the macrozoobenthos (Jazdzewski et al., 1991). As a part of a multidisciplinary study of the amphipods ecological roles in Antarctic benthic systems (De Broyer et al., 2001, Nyssen et al., 2002), about 150 specimens belonging to 25 species of 10 of the most common amphipod families occurring in the Southern Ocean have been involved in this study of amphipod trophic patterns. Beside “classical” stomach content analysis or field observations, the use of naturally occurring stable isotopes of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) has recently provided new insights into food web ecology (Hobson & Welch, 1992, Lepoint et al., 2000). This method is based on the direct relationship established between the isotopic signature of an organism and that of its preys (DeNiro & Epstein, 1978, 1981, Peterson & Fry, 1987). Nitrogen-15 typically shows a step-wise increase with trophic level within a food chain (Cabana & Rasmussen, 1994). Closer to the value of the diet, carbon-13 is preferentially used to assess the relative proportion of potential primary sources in a trophic web (ex.: pelagic vs benthic contribution to food intake) (Dauby et al., 1998, Hobson et al., 1995). Furthermore, for several species, the lipid signature – which has already been used successfully to help understand marine trophodynamics (Graeve et al., 2001, Nelson et al., 2001, Phleger et al. 1998) – and more particularly the fatty acid composition has been investigated as trophic biomarkers to reveal more precisely to which trophic guild they belong to.
format Conference Object
author Nyssen, Fabienne
Graeve, Martin
author_facet Nyssen, Fabienne
Graeve, Martin
author_sort Nyssen, Fabienne
title Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
title_short Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
title_full Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
title_fullStr Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
title_full_unstemmed Stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among Antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
title_sort stable isotopes and fatty acids used as biomarkers to distinguish among antarctic amphipods trophic guilds
publishDate 2003
url https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/71717
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
op_source International symposium IBMANT-ANDEEP, Ushuaia, Argentina [AR], October 2003
op_relation https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/71717
info:hdl:2268/71717
_version_ 1796935715013001216