Body size-based trophic structure of a deep marine ecosystem

Romero-Romero, Sonia; Molina-Ramirez, Axayacatl; Hoefer, Juan; Luis Acuna, Jose

Abstract

Nitrogen stable isotope ratios (delta N-15) and body size were used to describe the size-based trophic structure of a deep-sea ecosystem, the Aviles submarine Canyon (Cantabrian Sea, Southern Bay of Biscay). We analyzed delta N-15 of specimens collected on a seasonal basis (March 2012, October 2012, and May 2013), from a variety of zones (benthic, pelagic), taxa (from zooplankton through invertebrates and fishes to giant squids and cetaceans), or depths (from surface to 4700m) that spanned nine orders of magnitude in body mass. Our data reveal a strong linear dependence of trophic level on body size when data were considered either individually, aggregated into taxonomical categories, or binned into size classes. The three approaches render similar results that were not significantly different and yielded predator:prey body mass ratios (PPMR) of 1156:1, 3792:1 and 2718:1, respectively. Thus, our data represent unequivocal evidence of interspecific, size-based trophic structure of a whole ecosystem based on taxonomic/functional categories. We studied the variability in delta N-15 not explained by body mass (W) using linear mixed modeling and found that the delta N-15 vs. log(10)W relationship holds for both pelagic and benthic systems, with benthic organisms isotopically enriched relative to pelagic organisms of the same size. However there is a marked seasonal variation potentially related to the recycling state of the system.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000369852600019 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: Ecology
Volumen: 97
Número: 1
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2016
Página de inicio: 171
Página final: 181
DOI:

10.1890/15-0234.1

Notas: ISI