Abstract

Climatic variation alters biochemical and ecological processes, but it is difficult both to quantify the magnitude of such changes, and to differentiate long-term shifts from inter-annual variability. Here, we simultaneously quantify decade-scale isotopic variability at the lowest and highest trophic positions in the offshore California Current System (CCS) by measuring δ15N and δ13C values of amino acids in a top predator, the sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus). Using a time series of skin tissue samples as a biological archive, isotopic records from individual amino acids (AAs) can reveal the proximate factors driving a temporal decline we observed in bulk isotope values (a decline of ≥1 ‰) by decoupling changes in primary producer isotope values from those linked to the trophic position of this toothed whale. A continuous decline in baseline (i.e., primary producer) δ15N and δ13C values was observed from 1993 to 2005 (a decrease of ∼4‰ for δ15N source-AAs and 3‰ for δ13C essential-AAs), while the trophic position of whales was variable over time and it did not exhibit directional trends. The baseline δ15N and δ13C shifts suggest rapid ongoing changes in the carbon and nitrogen biogeochemical cycling in the offshore CCS, potentially occurring at faster rates than long-term shifts observed elsewhere in the Pacific. While the mechanisms forcing these biogeochemical shifts remain to be determined, our data suggest possible links to natural climate variability, and also corresponding shifts in surface nutrient availability. Our study demonstrates that isotopic analysis of individual amino acids from a top marine mammal predator can be a powerful new approach to reconstructing temporal variation in both biochemical cycling and trophic structure.

Highlights

  • The California Current System (CCS) contains one of the five major coastal upwelling zones in the world’s oceans, and hosts a great diversity and abundance of marine life [1]

  • Known interannual and decadal changes are related both to the El NinoSouthern Oscillation (ENSO) and to basin-scale processes associated with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) [1].The latter, is an index of interannual sea surface temperature (SST) variability in the North Pacific, that is related to physical and biochemical variations and influences community changes in plankton, fish and other taxa [4,5]

  • Foraging zone of sperm whales sampled in CCS

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Summary

Introduction

The California Current System (CCS) contains one of the five major coastal upwelling zones in the world’s oceans, and hosts a great diversity and abundance of marine life [1]. Declining bulk tissue d 15N values are sometimes attributed to a drop in consumer trophic level [17,18] or to baseline shifts due to either changes in foraging zone or biogeochemical cycles [16].

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