Trophic Discrimination Factors and Incorporation Rates of Carbon- and Nitrogen-Stable Isotopes in Adult Green Frogs, Lithobates clamitans.
Physiol Biochem Zool
; 88(5): 576-85, 2015.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-26658253
Stable isotope analysis is an increasingly useful ecological tool, but its accuracy depends on quantifying the tissue-specific trophic discrimination factors (TDFs) and isotopic incorporation rates for focal taxa. Despite the technique's ubiquity, most laboratory experiments determining TDFs and incorporation rates have focused on birds, mammals, and fish; we know little about terrestrial ectotherms, and amphibians in particular are understudied. In this study we used two controlled feeding experiments to determine carbon (δ(13)C) and nitrogen (δ(15)N) isotope TDFs for skin, whole blood, and bone collagen and incorporation rates for skin and whole blood in adult green frogs, Lithobates clamitans. The mean (±SD) TDFs for δ(13)C were 0.1 (±0.4) for skin, 0.5 (±0.5) for whole blood, and 1.6 (0.6) for bone collagen. The mean (±SD) TDFs for δ(15)N were 2.3 (±0.5) for skin, 2.3 (±0.4) for whole blood, and 3.1 (±0.6) for bone collagen. A combination of different isotopic incorporation models was best supported by our data. Carbon in skin was the only tissue in which incorporation was best explained by two compartments, which had half-lives of 89 and 8 d. The half-life of carbon in whole blood was 69 d. Half-lives for nitrogen were 75 d for skin and 71 d for whole blood. Our results help fill a taxonomic gap in our knowledge of stable isotope dynamics and provide ecologists with a method to measure anuran diets.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Carbono
/
Rana clamitans
/
Nitrogênio
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2015
Tipo de documento:
Article