A multi-tissue approach to assess the effects of lipid extraction on the isotopic composition of deep-sea fauna
Stable isotope analysis (SIA) of carbon and nitrogen is now a common tool to investigate trophic relationships and food-web structure in aquatic ecosystems. However, species-specific and tissue-specific lipid content sometimes hinders the correct interpretation of δ13C and δ15N values because lipids...
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Published in | Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology Vol. 497; pp. 230 - 242 |
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Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier B.V
01.12.2017
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Stable isotope analysis (SIA) of carbon and nitrogen is now a common tool to investigate trophic relationships and food-web structure in aquatic ecosystems. However, species-specific and tissue-specific lipid content sometimes hinders the correct interpretation of δ13C and δ15N values because lipids are 13C-depleted with respect to proteins, and thus tissue lipid extraction is generally invoked. We assessed the effects of lipid extraction on δ13C and δ15N compositions and C:N ratios of muscle, liver (or hepatopancreas) and gonads of three common Mediterranean deep-sea species with different locomotory activity, buoyancy mechanisms and feeding modes: the benthic-feeder shrimp Aristeus antennatus, the nektobenthic-feeder shark Galeus melastomus and the pelagic-feeder fish Micromesistius poutassou to evaluate both the effect of lipid extraction on SIA data and the validity of δ13C lipid correction models. Results showed that the effect of lipid extraction is not unique but some common patterns can be identified. Lipid extraction resulted in increased δ15N values in the liver and the muscle and in decreased δ15N values in the gonads, in increased δ13C values in all the tissues of the three species, except in the hepatopancreas of A. antennatus, and in decreased C:N ratios. The magnitude of the changes was species- and tissue-specific. We assessed the validity of δ13Cbulk correction equations for lipid content in muscle and liver tissues available from literature in the species from this study. Such equations provided corrected δ13C values equivalent to those obtained through lipid extraction when applied to a species with similar characteristics (i.e., taxon, behavior, etc.) to those for which the equations were designed. Our results for muscle tissue showed that not one of the equations tested was valid for the deep-sea shark G. melastomus, and we propose a species-specific model with a fairly feasible model efficiency. Besides, tissue-specific equations for liver in G. melastomus provided non-significant differences between δ13Ccorrected and δ13Clipid free values, but all model efficiencies were fairly low. Thus, lipid extraction trials on elasmobranch muscle and liver tissue to determine effects on δ13C and δ15N values on a species-by-species basis are recommended. Our research together with a comprehensive literature review on this topic, highlights that there is no accepted or mandated standard of treatment for lipids when using stable isotope analyses.
•The δ13C and the δ15N of gonad, muscle and liver are affected by lipid extraction.•Lipid extraction effects on isotope signatures are tissue- and species-specific.•Literature δ13C correction equations for lipids are appropriate when applied to species with similar characteristics.•Mathematical corrections for sharks are difficult to obtain due to their ureotelic metabolism. |
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ISSN: | 0022-0981 1879-1697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jembe.2017.10.001 |