Evidence of spatial and temporal changes in sources of organic matter in estuarine sediments: stable isotope and fatty acid analyses

Hydrobiologia ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 732 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leandro Bergamino ◽  
Tatenda Dalu ◽  
Nicole B. Richoux
2013 ◽  
Vol 64 (12) ◽  
pp. 1169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyun Je Park ◽  
Eun Jung Choy ◽  
Kun-Seop Lee ◽  
Chang-Keun Kang

Stable isotope and fatty acid analyses were used to examine trophic transfers within a seagrass bed and its adjacent shallow subtidal and intertidal habitats in a macrotidal embayment system in Korea. Suspended particulate organic matter (POM), sedimentary organic matter, benthic microalgae (BMA), green and decomposing leaves of Zostera marina, its epiphytes and a variety of consumers in different habitats were collected between May and June 2007. Z. marina, epiphytes and BMA were more 13C-enriched than offshore POM. The δ13C values of consumers from all habitats overlapped with those of BMA, Z. marina leaves and epiphytes, indicating the trophic importance of locally produced organic matter. Tissues of the dominant consumers in all habitats contained high quantities of fatty acid biomarkers for diatoms, but very low quantities of fatty acid biomarkers for seagrass. Principal component analysis based on fatty acids of consumers showed a very complex distribution, suggesting that they have diverse nutritive origins irrespective of feeding guilds and habitats. The isotopic mixing model showed that epiphytes and BMA served as major nutritional sources for consumer production in the seagrass and the adjacent intertidal habitats. Moreover, our results suggest that epiphytes and BMA outwell into the adjacent shallow subtidal habitats and provide considerable trophic subsidy for consumer production.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 3
Author(s):  
Margaux Mathieu-Resuge ◽  
Fabienne Le Grand ◽  
Gauthier Schaal ◽  
Edouard Kraffe ◽  
Anne Lorrain ◽  
...  

Deposit-feeding sea cucumbers are efficient nutrient recyclers and have the potential to contribute to the limitation of organic matter load in polyculture or integrated aquaculture systems. Assessing how they assimilate organic matter originating from other farmed species is therefore important for the development of such multi-species farming systems. Here, a coupled stable isotope − fatty acid approach was used to characterize the assimilation of organic matter from shrimp (Penaeus stylirostris) farming by Holothuria scabra in an experimental culture system. H. scabra were reared in mesocosms on shrimp farming-originating sediment with and without additional food sources (maize and fish meals). Although fatty acid results did indicate that shrimp-farming sediment was assimilated by holothurids, we found no evidence of maize waste and fish meal contribution to H. scabra organic carbon (no effect on δ13C, no accumulation of meal-specific fatty acids). However, a strong effect of fish meal on H. scabra δ15N was observed, suggesting that this additional food source could represent an alternative source of nitrogen for holothurids. Finally, this study supports the culture of H. scabra as a perspective to reduce sedimentary organic matter excess associated with shrimp farms, and suggest that the addition of selected food sources might contribute to increasing the content in some nitrogen organic compounds in holothurid tissues.


Author(s):  
Soowon Chang ◽  
Takahiro Yoshida ◽  
Robert Brent Binder ◽  
Yoshiki Yamagata ◽  
Daniel Castro-Lacouture

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