Possibility of direct utilization of seagrass and algae as main food resources by small gastropod, Lacuna decorata, in a subarctic lagoon, Hichirippu, eastern Hokkaido, Japan with stable isotope evidences of carbon and nitrogen

The small gastropod, Lacuna decorata Adams, living on macrophytobenthos or surface sediment, is one of the most dominant species of macrozoobenthos in Hichirippu lagoon covered with seagrass and macroalgae, eastern Hokkaido, Japan. We measured the standing stocks of primary producers and macrozooben...

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Published inPlankton & benthos research Vol. 5; no. 3; pp. 90 - 97
Main Authors Kajihara, Rumiko, Komorita, Tomohiro, Hamada, Akemi, Shibanuma, Seiichiro, Yamada, Toshiro, Montani, Shigeru
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Tokyo The Plankton Society of Japan, The Japanese Association of Benthology 2010
The Plankton Society of Japan and The Japanese Society of Benthology
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Summary:The small gastropod, Lacuna decorata Adams, living on macrophytobenthos or surface sediment, is one of the most dominant species of macrozoobenthos in Hichirippu lagoon covered with seagrass and macroalgae, eastern Hokkaido, Japan. We measured the standing stocks of primary producers and macrozoobenthos, and determined the stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios of the primary producers and L. decorata. With these results, we identify the main food items for L. decorata and discuss the feeding strategy of the small gastropod. This gastropod occupied about 64% in density and about 25% in biomass of the macrozoobenthos at all six sampling stations in the lagoon. It occurred densely on the surface of the sediment with dense patches of benthic microalgae (BMA), which contained extremely high levels of Chl.-a between 84 to 226 mg m−2 throughout the period of this study. Nevertheless, the stable isotope signatures of carbon and nitrogen of this gastropod clearly show the direct utilization of organic matter derived from seagrass, Zostera japonica, in the areas where the seagrass luxuriated. However, it shows also a flexible feeding strategy in food preference. It fed green algae such as Ulva pertusa and Urospora wormskioldii in the areas where the seagrass grew scarcely.
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ISSN:1880-8247
1882-627X
DOI:10.3800/pbr.5.90