Isotopic discrimination between food and blood and feathers of captive penguins: Implications for dietary studies in the wild

被引:222
作者
Cherel, Y
Hobson, KA
Hassani, S
机构
[1] CNRS, Ctr Etud Biol Chize, Unite Propre Rech 1934, F-79360 Villiers En Bois, France
[2] Environm Canada, Prairie & No Wildlife Res Ctr, Saskatoon, SK S7N 0X4, Canada
[3] Port Plaisance Moulin Blanc, F-29275 Brest, France
来源
PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY | 2005年 / 78卷 / 01期
关键词
D O I
10.1086/425202
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
Using measurements of naturally occurring stable isotopes to reconstruct diets or source of feeding requires quantifying isotopic discrimination factors or the relationships between isotope ratios in food and in consumer tissues. Diet-tissue discrimination factors of carbon (C-13/C-12, or delta(13)C) and nitrogen (N-15/N-14, or delta(15)N) isotopes in whole blood and feathers, resenting noninvasive sampling techniques, were examined using three species of captive penguins (king Aptenodytes patagonicus, gentoo Pygoscelis papua, and rockhopper Eudyptes chrysocome penguins) fed known diets. King and rockhopper penguins raised on a constant diet of herring and capelin, respectively, had tissues enriched in N-15 compared to fish, with discrimination factors being higher in feathers than in blood. These data, together with previous works, allowed us to calculate average discrimination factors for N-15 between whole lipid-ftee prey and blood and feathers of piscivorous birds; they amount to +2.7% and +4.2%, respectively. Both fish species were segregated by their delta(13)C and delta(15)N values, and importantly, lipid-free fish muscle tissue was consistently depleted in BC and enriched in N-15 compared to whole lipid-free fish. This finding has important implications because previous studies usually base dietary reconstructions on muscle of prey rather than on whole prey items consumed by the predator. We tested the effect of these differences using mass balance calculations to the quantification of food sources of gentoo penguins that had a mixed diet. Modeling indicated correct estimates when using the isotopic signature of whole fish (muscle) and the discrimination factors between whole fish (muscle) and penguin blood. Conversely, the use of isotopic signatures of muscle together with discrimination factors between whole fish and blood (or the reverse) leads to spurious estimates in food proportions. Consequently, great care must be taken in the choice of isotopic discrimination factors to apply to wild species for which no controlled experiments on captive individuals have been done. Finally, our results also indicate that there is no need to remove lipids before isotopic analysis of avian blood.
引用
收藏
页码:106 / 115
页数:10
相关论文
共 60 条
[1]   Stable isotopes indicate the extent of freshwater feeding by cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo shot at inland fisheries in England [J].
Bearhop, S ;
Thompson, DR ;
Waldron, S ;
Russell, IC ;
Alexander, G ;
Furness, RW .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 1999, 36 (01) :75-84
[2]  
Bearhop S, 2000, AUK, V117, P504, DOI 10.1642/0004-8038(2000)117[0504:IOLAUA]2.0.CO
[3]  
2
[4]   Factors that influence assimilation rates and fractionation of nitrogen and carbon stable isotopes in avian blood and feathers [J].
Bearhop, S ;
Waldron, S ;
Votier, SC ;
Furness, RW .
PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY, 2002, 75 (05) :451-458
[5]   Complete trophic segregation between South Georgian and common diving petrels during breeding at Iles Kerguelen [J].
Bocher, P ;
Cherel, Y ;
Hobson, KA .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2000, 208 :249-264
[6]   Using stable-isotope analysis of feathers to distinguish moulting and breeding origins of seabirds [J].
Cherel, Y ;
Hobson, KA ;
Weimerskirch, H .
OECOLOGIA, 2000, 122 (02) :155-162
[7]   Summer diet of king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) at the Falkland Islands, southern Atlantic Ocean [J].
Cherel, Y ;
Pütz, K ;
Hobson, KA .
POLAR BIOLOGY, 2002, 25 (12) :898-906
[8]   SEASONAL AND FASTING-RELATED CHANGES IN CIRCULATING GONADAL-STEROIDS AND PROLACTIN IN KING PENGUINS, APTENODYTES PATAGONICUS [J].
CHEREL, Y ;
MAUGET, R ;
LACROIX, A ;
GILLES, J .
PHYSIOLOGICAL ZOOLOGY, 1994, 67 (05) :1154-1173
[9]  
Cooper J., 1990, P131
[10]   INFLUENCE OF DIET ON DISTRIBUTION OF CARBON ISOTOPES IN ANIMALS [J].
DENIRO, MJ ;
EPSTEIN, S .
GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 1978, 42 (05) :495-506