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Stable isotopes reveal strong marine and El Niño effects on island food webs

Paul Stapp (), Gary A. Polis and Francisco Sánchez Piñero
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Paul Stapp: University of California
Gary A. Polis: University of California
Francisco Sánchez Piñero: University of California

Nature, 1999, vol. 401, issue 6752, 467-469

Abstract: Abstract Stable isotope analysis is a powerful tool for unravelling the complex structure of food webs1,2,3. This technique is particularly well suited for studies at ecosystem boundaries, where physical processes and mobile consumers link the dynamics of seemingly disparate systems4,5,6. In coastal and insular environments, seabirds play a crucial role in transporting marine-based energy and nutrients to islands7,8,9. Here we show using stable isotopes that nutrients from the ocean drive the dynamics of terrestrial food webs on small islands. The indirect effects of seabird-derived nutrients on plant productivity are particularly prominent during wet El Niño Southern Oscillation years on our Gulf of California study sites. During dry years that characterize the region, many terrestrial consumers are subsidized by carrion and prey from the ocean. Shifts in trophic structure related to El Niño Southern Oscillation could only be elucidated because of the distinct nitrogen isotope ratios associated with seabird islands. The contributions of seabirds and other marine sources are reflected in the isotope signatures of terrestrial consumers in ways that challenge conventional interpretations of stable isotope results in studies of food webs.

Date: 1999
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DOI: 10.1038/46769

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