Department of Environmental Biology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
CoNISMa-Consorzio Nazionale Interuniversitario per le Scienze del Mare, Rome, Italy.
PLoS One. 2018 Mar 23;13(3):e0194796. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194796. eCollection 2018.
Climate change is expected to affect resource-consumer interactions underlying stability in polar food webs. Polar benthic organisms have adapted to the marked seasonality characterising their habitats by concentrating foraging and reproductive activity in summer months, when inputs from sympagic and pelagic producers increase. While this enables the persistence of biodiverse food webs, the mechanisms underlying changes in resource use and nutrient transfer are poorly understood. Thus, our understanding of how temporal and spatial variations in the supply of resources may affect food web structure and functioning is limited. By means of C and N isotopic analyses of two key Antarctic benthic consumers (Adamussium colbecki, Bivalvia, and Sterechinus neumayeri, Echinoidea) and Bayesian mixing models, we describe changes in trophic niche and nutrient transfer across trophic levels associated with the long- and short-term diet and body size of specimens sampled in midsummer in both shallow and deep waters. Samplings occurred soon after the sea-ice broke up at Tethys Bay, an area characterised by extreme seasonality in sea-ice coverage and productivity in the Ross Sea. In the long term, the trophic niche was broader and variation between specimens was greater, with intermediate-size specimens generally consuming a higher number of resources than small and large specimens. The coupling of energy channels in the food web was consequently more direct than in the short term. Sediment and benthic algae were more frequently consumed in the long term, before the sea-ice broke up, while consumers specialised on sympagic algae and plankton in the short term. Regardless of the time scale, sympagic algae were more frequently consumed in shallow waters, while plankton was more frequently consumed in deep waters. Our results suggest a strong temporal relationship between resource availability and the trophic niche of benthic consumers in Antarctica. Potential climate-driven changes in the timing and quality of nutrient inputs may have profound implications for the structure of polar food webs and the persistence of their constituent species, which have adapted their trophic niches to a highly predictable schedule of resource inputs.
预计气候变化将影响极地食物网稳定性的资源消费者相互作用。极地底栖生物通过在夏季集中觅食和繁殖活动来适应其栖息地的明显季节性特征,此时来自共生和浮游生物生产者的输入增加。虽然这使得生物多样性丰富的食物网得以持续存在,但资源利用和营养转移的变化机制仍知之甚少。因此,我们对资源供应的时间和空间变化如何影响食物网结构和功能的理解是有限的。通过对两种关键的南极底栖消费者(Adamussium colbecki,双壳类,和 Sterechinus neumayeri,海胆类)的 C 和 N 同位素分析以及贝叶斯混合模型,我们描述了与长期和短期饮食以及在罗斯海特提斯湾(一个海冰覆盖和生产力季节性极强的区域)采样的标本的身体大小相关的营养位和营养转移在各个营养级上的变化。采样是在海冰破裂后不久进行的,海冰破裂是罗斯海特提斯湾的一个季节性特征。从长期来看,营养位较宽,标本之间的差异较大,中等大小的标本通常比小标本和大标本消耗更多的资源。因此,与短期相比,食物网中的能量通道耦合更为直接。在海冰破裂之前,长期内沉积物和底栖藻类被更频繁地消耗,而在短期内,消费者专门以共生藻类和浮游生物为食。无论时间尺度如何,在浅水层中更频繁地消耗共生藻类,而在深水层中更频繁地消耗浮游生物。我们的研究结果表明,在南极洲,资源的可利用性和底栖消费者的营养位之间存在强烈的时间关系。营养输入的时间和质量的潜在气候变化可能对极地食物网的结构及其组成物种的持久性产生深远影响,这些物种已经适应了高度可预测的资源输入时间表的营养位。