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Elucidating the trophodynamics of four coral reef fishes of the Solomon Islands using δ15N and δ13C

Authors :
N. D. W. Greenwood
Nicholas Polunin
C. J. Sweeting
Source :
Coral Reefs. 29:785-792
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2010.

Abstract

Size-related diet shifts are important characteristics of fish trophodynamics. Here, body size–related changes in muscle δ15N and δ13C of four coral reef fishes, Acanthurus nigrofuscus (herbivore), Chaetodon lunulatus (corallivore), Chromis xanthura (planktivore) and Plectropomus leopardus (piscivore) were investigated at two locations in the Solomon Islands. All four species occupied distinct isotopic niches and the concurrent δ13C′ values of C. xanthura and P. leopardus suggested a common planktonic production source. Size-related shifts in δ15N, and thus trophic level, were observed in C. xanthura, C. lunulatus and P. leopardus, and these trends varied between location, indicating spatial differences in trophic ecology. A literature review of tropical fishes revealed that positive δ15N-size trends are common while negative δ15N-size trends are rare. Size-δ15N trends fall into approximately equal groups representing size-based feeding within a food chain, and that associated with a basal resource shift and occurs in conjunction with changes in production source, indicated by δ13C. The review also revealed large scale differences in isotope-size trends and this, combined with small scale location differences noted earlier, highlights a high degree of plasticity in the reef fishes studied. This suggests that trophic size analysis of reef fishes would provide a productive avenue to identify species potentially vulnerable to reef impacts as a result of constrained trophic behaviour.

Details

ISSN :
14320975 and 07224028
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Coral Reefs
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........889ac6c58e11b08ffa96ee10a0d7fbe2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-010-0626-1