Marine carbon and nitrogen in southeastern Alaska stream
food webs: evidence from artificial and natural streams
Dominic T. Chaloner, Kristine M. Martin, Mark S. Wipfli, Peggy H. Ostrom, and
Gary A. Lamberti
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 59(8): 1257-1265 (2002)
Abstract: Incorporation
of marine-derived nutrients (MDN) into freshwater food webs of southeastern
Alaska was studied by measuring the natural abundance of nitrogen and carbon
stable isotopes in biota from artificial and natural streams. Biofilm, aquatic
macroinvertebrates (detritivores, shredders, and predators), and fish (coho
salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch, and cutthroat trout, Oncorhynchus
clarki) were sampled from streams in which Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus
spp.) carcasses had been artificially placed or were present naturally. In the
presence of carcasses, all trophic levels incorporated marine-derived nitrogen
(range, 22–73% of total N) and carbon (range, 7–52% of total C). In general,
chironomid midges assimilated more marine-derived nitrogen and carbon than did
other consumers. The assimilation of MDN by aquatic organisms and subsequent
isotopic enrichment (5–6‰ for 15N, 3–4‰ for 13C) were
similar in experimentally and naturally carcass-enriched streams. For specific
taxa, however, percent assimilation for marine nitrogen and carbon were often
dissimilar, possibly because of fractionation or transfer inefficiencies. These
results suggest that pathways of MDN incorporation into stream food webs
include both consumption of salmon material by macroinvertebrates and fish and
uptake of mineralized MDN by biofilm. Incorporation of MDN into multiple
trophic levels demonstrates the ecological significance of annual returns of
anadromous fishes for sustaining the productivity of freshwater food webs.