4.5 Article

Determining trophic niche width: an experimental test of the stable isotope approach

Journal

OIKOS
Volume 121, Issue 12, Pages 1985-1994

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2012.20185.x

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Funding

  1. Winfried Lampert
  2. Max Planck Society
  3. AGR under Marine Institute under the Marine Research Sub-Programme of the Irish National Development Plan
  4. Marine Research Sub-Programme of the Irish National Development Plan

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Determining the trophic niche width of an animal population and the relative degree to which a generalist population consists of dietary specialists are long-standing problems of ecology. It has been proposed that the variance of stable isotope values in consumer tissues could be used to quantify trophic niche width of consumer populations. However, this promising idea has not yet been rigorously tested. By conducting controlled laboratory experiments using model consumer populations (Daphnia sp., Crustacea) with controlled diets, we investigated the effect of individual- and population-level specialisation and generalism on consumer d13C mean and variance values. While our experimental data follow general expectations, we extend current qualitative models to quantitative predictions of the dependence of isotopic variance on dietary correlation time, a measure for the typical time over which a consumer changes its diet. This quantitative approach allows us to pinpoint possible procedural pitfalls and critical sources of measurement uncertainty. Our results show that the stable isotope approach represents a powerful method for estimating trophic niche widths, especially when taking the quantitative concept of dietary correlation time into account.

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