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      Estimating the trophic position of aquatic consumers in river food webs using stable nitrogen isotopes

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      Journal of the North American Benthological Society
      Society for Freshwater Science

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          Exploitation Ecosystems in Gradients of Primary Productivity

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            Feeding Ecology of Stream Invertebrates

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              Comparison of aquatic food chains using nitrogen isotopes.

              Recent studies have shown the utility of delta(15)N to model trophic structure and contaminant bioaccumulation in aquatic food webs. However, cross-system comparisons in delta(15)N can be complicated by differences in delta(15)N at the base of the food chain. Such baseline variation in delta(15)N is difficult to resolve using plankton because of the large temporal variability in the delta(15)N of small organisms that have fast nitrogen turnover. Comparisons using large primary consumers, which have stable tissue isotopic signatures because of their slower nitrogen turnover, show that delta(15)N increases markedly with the human population density in the lake watershed. This shift in delta(15)N likely reflects the high delta(15)N of human sewage. Correcting for this baseline variation in delta(15)N, we report that, contrary to expectations based on previous food-web analysis, the food chains leading up to fish varied by about only one trophic level among the 40 lakes studied. Our results also suggest that the delta(15)N signatures of nitrogen at the base of the food chain will provide a useful tool in the assessment of anthropogenic nutrient inputs.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of the North American Benthological Society
                Journal of the North American Benthological Society
                Society for Freshwater Science
                0887-3593
                1937-237X
                June 2007
                June 2007
                : 26
                : 2
                : 273-285
                Article
                10.1899/0887-3593(2007)26[273:ETTPOA]2.0.CO;2
                1ab14f0e-5bee-4a69-b6f3-e0c23ac18bb0
                © 2007
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