摘要

Analyses of carbon stable isotopes are often used to estimate the contributions of allochthonous and autochthonous dietary resources to aquatic consumers. Most pelagic food web studies assume that all phytoplankton taxa have a similar delta C-13 value. We studied pelagic food web compartments (dissolved inorganic carbon [DIC], phytoplankton, bacteria, seston, cladoceran zooplankton) in 12 small (< 0.1 km(2)) lakes in southern Finland. These lakes were classified as oligotrophic, mesotrophic, eutrophic, and dystrophic based on their concentrations of total phosphorus and dissolved organic carbon. Additionally, we studied phytoplankton photosynthetic carbon fractionation (epsilon(p)) in laboratory conditions. The photosynthetic fractionation in 28 phytoplankton cultures from nine different phytoplankton classes varied significantly at the class level, and fractionation correlated significantly with the DIC concentration of the growth media. In small boreal lakes, the delta C-13 values of different phytoplankton taxa, as directly measured or estimated from the delta C-13 values of biomarker fatty acids, varied greatly (-18 parts per thousand to - 44.5 parts per thousand). Phytoplankton delta C-13 values varied significantly by lake type and were most depleted in dystrophic lakes even though the delta C-13 values of the DIC was similar to mesotrophic lakes. Further within-taxa variation was found between lakes and between different depths within a lake. Vertical samples from dystrophic lakes also showed lower ep in the phytoplankton from meta-and hypolimnion, possibly as a result of reduced light intensity. Altogether, in nine of the 10 sampled lakes, the delta C-13 values of cladoceran zooplankton were between the minimum and the maximum phytoplankton delta C-13 value of each lake, and thus, phytoplankton alone could explain zooplankton delta C-13 values. We conclude that stable isotope mixing models should take into account carbon variation among different phytoplankton taxa.

  • 出版日期2016-8