Weak seasonality in benthic food web structure within an Arctic inflow shelf region

•Isotopic niche areas of functional groups changed minimally between seasons.•Change in food quality at the seafloor lagged the spring bloom by up to six months.•Only two species showed 13C-enrichment consistent with sea-ice algal assimilation.•Deposit feeders had the most seasonally consistent isot...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in oceanography 2023-09, Vol.217, p.103109, Article 103109
Hauptverfasser: Ziegler, Amanda F., Bluhm, Bodil A., Renaud, Paul E., Jørgensen, Lis L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Isotopic niche areas of functional groups changed minimally between seasons.•Change in food quality at the seafloor lagged the spring bloom by up to six months.•Only two species showed 13C-enrichment consistent with sea-ice algal assimilation.•Deposit feeders had the most seasonally consistent isotopic niche.•Diet plasticity in several taxa apparent from isotopic niche areas. The Arctic Ocean is characterized by pronounced seasonality in the quantity and quality of organic matter exported from the surface ocean. While it is well established that changes in food availability can alter the abundance, biomass and function of benthic organisms, the impact on food web structure is not well studied. We used bulk carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis to assess the quantity and quality of sediment organic matter and structure of the benthic food web in four seasons within the Northern Barents Sea (76°N − 82 °C). Despite a highly seasonal vertical flux, we found that the organic carbon and chlorophyll-a content of surface sediments was seasonally stable, suggesting a lack of seasonality in food availability at the seafloor. However, organic biomarkers indicate that the quality of sediment organic matter increased to a maximum in August and December, up to 6 months after the spring bloom. The seasonal stability of food quantity was mirrored in food-web structure (e.g., total isotopic range, number of trophic levels) which did not change significantly across sampling periods. We expected that suspension and deposit feeders would respond more readily to seasonal changes in food quality compared to predators. However, we observed no significant seasonal changes in the trophic levels or isotopic niche areas of benthic functional groups. The centroids of isotopic niches of all benthic functional groups shifted seasonally by
ISSN:0079-6611
1873-4472
1873-4472
DOI:10.1016/j.pocean.2023.103109