Trophic importance of microphytobenthos and bacteria to meiofauna in soft-bottom intertidal habitats: A combined trophic marker approach
Meiofauna can play an important role in the carbon fluxes of soft-bottom coastal habitats. Investigation of their feeding behavior and trophic position remains challenging due to their small size. In this study, we determine and compare the food sources used by nematodes and benthic copepods by usin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Marine environmental research 2019-08, Vol.149, p.50-66 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Meiofauna can play an important role in the carbon fluxes of soft-bottom coastal habitats. Investigation of their feeding behavior and trophic position remains challenging due to their small size. In this study, we determine and compare the food sources used by nematodes and benthic copepods by using stable isotope compositions, fatty acid profiles and compound specific isotope analyses of fatty acids in the mudflats, seagrass beds and a sandflat of the Marennes-Oléron Bay, France, and the Sylt-Rømø Bight, Germany. Suspended particulate organic matter was much more 13C-depleted than other food sources and meiofauna, highlighting its poor role in the different studied habitats. The very low proportions of vascular plant fatty acid markers in meiofauna demonstrated that these consumers did not rely on this food source, either fresh or detrital, even in seagrass beds. The combined use of stable isotopes and fatty acids emphasized microphytobenthos and benthic bacteria as the major food sources of nematodes and benthic copepods. Compound specific analyses of a bacteria marker confirmed that bacteria mostly used microphytobenthos as a substrate.
•Nematodes and benthic copepods mainly feed on diatoms and bacteria.•Diatoms and bacteria as food source are primarily originating from the benthos.•Suspended particulate organic matter and seagrass matter are poorly used by meiofauna.•Habitats with different food sources did not affect meiofauna feeding behavior.•Use of multiple trophic markers provided unique additional information. |
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ISSN: | 0141-1136 1879-0291 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.marenvres.2019.05.014 |