Journal
MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN
Volume 71, Issue 1-2, Pages 152-158Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2013.03.021
Keywords
Sewage; Nitrogen isotopes; Monitoring; Spatial gradients; Coastal waters
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Assessments of sewage pollution routinely employ stable nitrogen isotope analysis (delta N-15) in biota, but multiple taxa are rarely used. This single species focus leads to underreporting of whether derived spatial N patterns are consistent. Here we test the question of 'reproducibility', incorporating 'taxonomic replication' in the measurement of delta N-15 gradients in algae, seagrasses, crabs and fish with distance from a sewage outfall on the Adelaide coast (southern Australia). Isotopic sewage signals were equally strong in all taxa and declined at the same rate. This congruence amongst taxa has not been reported previously. It implies that sewage-N propagates to fish via a tight spatial coupling between production and consumption processes, resulting from limited animal movement that closely preserves the spatial pollution imprint. In situations such as this where consumers mirror pollution signals of primary producers, analyses of higher trophic levels will capture a broader ambit of ecological effects. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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