DIETARY VARIATION IN ARCTIC FOXES (ALOPEX-LAGOPUS) - AN ANALYSIS OF STABLE CARBON ISOTOPES

被引:87
作者
ANGERBJORN, A
HERSTEINSSON, P
LIDEN, K
NELSON, E
机构
[1] WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT INST,IS-125 REYKJAVIK,ICELAND
[2] UNIV STOCKHOLM,DEPT ARCHAEOL,S-10691 STOCKHOLM,SWEDEN
[3] SIMON FRASER UNIV,DEPT ARCHAEOL,BURNABY V5A 1S6,BC,CANADA
关键词
CARBON ISOTOPES; ARCTIC FOX; DIET; BONE; COLLAGEN;
D O I
10.1007/BF00627734
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We used stable carbon isotopes to analyse individual variation in arctic fox diet. We extracted collagen from bones (the lower jaw), and measured stable carbon isotopes. The foxes came from three different localities: Iceland, where both microtines and reindeer are rare; west Greenland, where microtines are absent; and Sweden, where seat analyses showed the primary food to be microtine rodents and reindeer. The Icelandic samples included foxes from both coastal and inland habitats, the Swedish sample came from an inland area, and the Greenland sample from coastal sites. The spatial variation in the isotopic pattern followed a basic division between marine and terrestrial sources of protein. Arctic foxes from inland sites had delta(13)C values of -21.4 (Ice land) and -20.4 parts per thousand (Sweden), showing typical terrestrial values. Coastal foxes from Greenland had typical marine Values of -14.9 parts per thousand, whereas coastal foxes from Iceland had intermediate values of -17.7 parts per thousand. However, there was individual variation within each sample, probably caused by habitat heterogeneity and territoriality among foxes. The variation on a larger scale was related to the availability of different food items. These results were in accordance with other dietary analyses based on seat analyses. This is the first time that stable isotopes have been used to reveal individual dietary patterns. Our study also indicated that isotopic values can be used on a global scale.
引用
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页码:226 / 232
页数:7
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