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The role of standing dead Spartina alterniflora and benthic microalgae in salt marsh food webs: considerations based on multiple stable isotope analysis

TLDR
In this article, the stable isotope compositions (C, N, and S) of hve, senescent, and standing dead Spartina alterniflora were compared in order to determine the effects of aerial decomposition on the isotopic signature of aboveground S. alternjflora entering the food chain, which indicated that N2fixing microorganisms associdated with microalgal communities were an important source of N to salt marsh consumers.
Abstract
The stable isotope compositions (C, N, and S) of hve, senescent, and standing dead Spartina alterniflora were compared in order to determine the effects of aerial decomposition on the isotopic signature of aboveground S. dlterniflora tissue entering the food chain. Aerial decomposition of aboveground S. alterniflora resulted in a 6 to 18% increase in P S , and a 2 to 3 % decrease in 615N values; 613c values were unchanged. We describe mechanisms whereby the activity of fungi and epiphytic microorganisms may contribute to the observed shlfts in and 6I5N, respectively. The 613c value of salt marsh benthic and eplphytic microalgae ranged from -13.0% in summer to -17.6%0 in early spring. Average 6'\" values of microalgae and standing dead S. altemiflora were -0 3 and l.?%, respectively, reflecting the activity of NZ-fixing microorganisms. The 615N values for omnivorous and herbivorous salt marsh macrofauna ranged between 7.5 and 2.2% and for predatory Fundulus spp. averaged 9.2%. Given a presumptive + 3 % trophic shift in N assimilation, these results suggest that N2-fixing microorganisms associdted with microalgal communities were an important source of N to salt marsh consumers. The 6% 6'\"N, and 6\"'s values of primary producers were compared to the values of the following consumers: Fundulus spp., Uca spp., Ilyanassa obsoleta, and Littoraria irrorata. 6I3C VS 6 1 5 ~ and 613C vs 63JS dual isotope plots demonstrated that microalgae and standing dead S. alternjflora are important food resources in the North Carolina (USA) marshes we sampled. In addition, a compilation of literature values suggests that this is true in salt marshes throughout the East and Gulf coasts of North America. Future isotope studies of marsh food webs should include detrital Spartina spp. material in analyses of trophic structure.

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Citations
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Influence of Diet On the Distribtion of Nitrogen Isotopes in Animals

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of diet on the distribution of nitrogen isotopes in animals was investigated by analyzing animals grown in the laboratory on diets of constant nitrogen isotopic composition and found that the variability of the relationship between the δ^(15)N values of animals and their diets is greater for different individuals raised on the same diet than for the same species raised on different diets.
Dissertation

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TL;DR: In this paper, a Mesocosm and Microcosm Experiments on the Feeding of Temperate Salt Marsh Foraminifera are described, and a taxonomic resolution and Tidal Gradients in Food Webs for Two Temperate salt Marshes: How Much Detail is Enough?
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Assessment of mangrove and salt marsh mesocosm functional value using periwinkle snails, littoraria angulifera and littoraria irrorata, as an indicator

TL;DR: Swartwood et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated whether the age structure, population density, and distribution of Littoraria angulifera in the Smithsonian Institution's Florida Everglades mesocosm in Washington, DC is analogous to that of wild populations.
Dissertation

Isotope geochemistry of organic sulfur compounds with links to biogeochemical sulfur cycling and radical chemistry

Harry Oduro
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DissertationDOI

Anoxic metabolism in permeable sediments

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Varying stable nitrogen isotope ratios of different coastal marsh plants and their relationships with wastewater nitrogen and land use in New England, USA.

TL;DR: The stable nitrogen isotope ratios of some biota have been used as indicators of sources of anthropogenic nitrogen and the relationships of marsh plants, Iva frutescens, Phragmites australis, Spartina patens and Ulva lactuca with wastewater nitrogen and land development in New England are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth, survival, and metal content of marsh invertebrates fed diets of detritus from Spartina alterniflora Loisel. and Phragmites australis Cav. Trin. ex Steud. from metal-contaminated and clean sites

TL;DR: The data do not support the general assumption that Phragmites leaf detritus is of poorer nutritional quality than Spartinaalterniflora leafdetritus to estuarine consumers, and also support the idea that fiddler crabs do not differ in metal concentrations after the feedingexperiment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competitive displacement of a detritivorous salt marsh snail

TL;DR: It is suggested that periwinkles play an important regulatory role in this detritivore assemblage and that Littoraria may limit the lower distribution of Melampus directly (through competition) and indirectly (through habitat modification).
Journal ArticleDOI

Utilization of invasive tamarisk by salt marsh consumers

TL;DR: The hypothesis that invasive species can alter the trophic structure of an environment through addition of detritus and can also potentially impact higher troPHic levels by shifting dominance within the invertebrate community to species not widely consumed is supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Survival, growth and reproduction of the salt-marsh amphipod Uhlorchestia spartinophila reared on natural diets of senescent and dead Spartina alterniflora leaves

TL;DR: Structural characteristics and variation in rates of fungal occupation within different portions of cordgrass leaves may affect the amphipod's ability to access plant production made available by decomposers.
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