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Use of fatty acids from aquatic prey varies with foraging strategy

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined how dietary flexibility and distance from a lake influenced the degree to which generalist insectivores relied upon dietary PUFA from emergent aquatic insects versus n-3 LC-PUFA synthesized from precursor compounds found in terrestrial insects.
Abstract
1. Across ecosystems, resources vary in their nutritional composition and thus their dietary value to consumers. Animals can either access organic compounds, such as fatty acids, directly from diet or through internal biosynthesis, and the extent to which they use these two alternatives likely varies based on the availability of such compounds across the nutritional landscape. Cross-ecosystem subsidies of important dietary nutrients, like omega-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 LC-PUFA), may provide consumers with the opportunity to relax the demands of synthesis and rely upon dietary flexibility rather than internal metabolic processes. 2. Here, we examined how dietary flexibility and distance from a lake influenced the degree to which generalist insectivores relied upon dietary n-3 LC-PUFA from emergent aquatic insects versus n-3 LC-PUFA synthesized from precursor compounds found in terrestrial insects. 3. We used bulk and compound-specific stable isotope analyses to understand spider and insectivorous bird (Blue Tit; Cyanistes caeruleus) reliance on aquatic and terrestrial resources, including dietary PUFA sources, along a riparian to upland gradient from a lake. We simultaneously investigated n-3 LC-PUFA synthesis ability in nestlings using 13C fatty acid labelling. 4. We found that riparian spiders took advantage of emergent aquatic insect subsidies, deriving their overall diet and their n-3 PUFA from aquatic resources whereas nestling birds at all distances and upland spiders relied upon terrestrial resources, including PUFA. Our 13C labelling experiment demonstrated that nestling birds were able to synthesize the n-3 LC-PUFA docosahexaenoic acid from the dietary precursor α-linolenic acid, suggesting that they are not limited by aquatic resources to satisfy their LC-PUFA requirements. 5. Overall, this study suggests that habitat generalist insectivores vary in the degree to which they can shift diet to take advantage of high-quality aquatic resources depending upon both their foraging flexibility and internal synthesis capacity.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Poultry Meat and Eggs as an Alternative Source of n-3 Long-Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids for Human Nutrition

TL;DR: The present work aims to provide a general overview of the main strategies that should be adopted during rearing and postproduction to enrich and preserve n-3 LC-PUFA in poultry products, and includes dietary supplementation of α-Linolenic acid (ALA) or n- 3 LC- PUFA, or enhancing the LA (Linoleic acid)/ALA ratio and antioxidant concentrations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of vital dietary biomolecules in eco-evo-devo dynamics.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors review the emerging work on omega-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, focusing predominantly on predator-prey interactions, to illustrate that trade-off between capacities to consume resources rich in vital biomolecules and internal synthesis capacity drives differences in phenotype and fitness of consumers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fatty acid composition differs between emergent aquatic and terrestrial insects—A detailed single system approach

TL;DR: In this paper , the differences in fatty acid profiles between aquatic and terrestrial insects at a single aquatic-terrestrial interface over an entire growing season were examined to assess the strength and temporal consistency of the dichotomy in fat acid profiles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Export of dietary lipids via emergent insects from eutrophic fishponds

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated nine eutrophic fishponds in Austria from June to September 2020 to examine how Chlorophyll-a concentrations affect the biomass of emergent insect taxa and their total lipid and long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trophic transfer of polyunsaturated fatty acids across the aquatic–terrestrial interface: An experimental tritrophic food chain approach

TL;DR: In this article , a tritrophic food chain consisting of one of four basic food sources, an intermediary collector gatherer (Chironomus riparius, Chironomidae), and a riparian web-building spider (Tetragnatha sp.).
References
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A distributed, architecture-centric approach to computing accurate recommendations from very large and sparse datasets

TL;DR: This work introduces a novel architecture model that supports scalable, distributed suggestions from multiple independent nodes, and proposes a novel algorithm that generates a more optimal recommender input, which is the reason for a considerable accuracy improvement.
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Reciprocal subsidies: dynamic interdependence between terrestrial and aquatic food webs.

TL;DR: Seasonal contrasts between allochthonous prey supply and in situ prey biomass determine the importance of reciprocal subsidies in mutual trophic interactions between contiguous habitats.
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Tangled webs: reciprocal flows of invertebrate prey link streams and riparian zones

TL;DR: Characteristics of reciprocal prey subsidies are reviewed and it is investigated whether reciprocal prey fluxes stabilise linked stream–riparian ecosystems, how landscape context affects the magnitude and importance of subsidies, and how impacts of human disturbance can propagate between streams and riparian zones via these trophic linkages.
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Shifts in caterpillar biomass phenology due to climate change and its impact on the breeding biology of an insectivorous bird.

TL;DR: The descriptive models for both the caterpillar biomass peak as for the great tit laying dates are used to predict shifts in caterpillar and bird phenology 2005–2100, using an IPCC climate scenario and show that both the number of fledglings as well as their fledging weight is affected by this synchrony.
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Analyzing mixing systems using a new generation of Bayesian tracer mixing models.

TL;DR: Through MixSIAR, an inclusive, rich, and flexible Bayesian tracer mixing model framework implemented as an open-source R package, the disparate array of mixing model tools are consolidated into a single platform, diversified the set of available parameterizations, and provided developers a platform upon which to continue improving mixing model analyses in the future.
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