Abstract

Seagrass meadows provide important habitats and rich organic carbon sources for consumers at different trophic levels but are threatened by accelerating eutrophication in coastal waters. Nevertheless, at present, carbon transfer processes throughout the food web and trophic pathways in eutrophic seagrass meadows are still poorly known. To resolve this issue, carbon sources of different trophic communities in a eutrophic tropical seagrass meadow [Xincun (XC) bay, South China Sea] under eutrophication were examined in summer and winter using dual stable isotopes. The δ13C value of omnivores and carnivores overlapped more with that of herbivores and planktivores/filter feeders, which mainly overlapped with that of epiphytes in summer and macroalgae in winter. Meanwhile, epiphytes and macroalgae exhibited high biomass and corresponding highest contribution to herbivores, omnivores, and carnivores in summer and winter, respectively. These results suggest that the grazing food chain was the main trophic pathway in this eutrophic seagrass meadow, and that the transfer of carbon flow in the grazing food chain was mainly dominated by the proliferating epiphytes or macroalgae carbon. In contrast, the contribution of seagrass to detritivores in both seasons was higher than that of other food sources. Our findings suggest that in eutrophic tropical seagrass meadows, the proliferation of epiphytes or macroalgae induced by high nutrient loading, as well as their seasonal changes, has a greater impact on the transfer of carbon in the grazing food chain than that in the detritus food chain, and the seagrass fueled the food web mainly through the detritus food chain.

Highlights

  • Seagrass meadows are highly complex and productive marine ecological systems that provide numerous ecological services

  • Among all the food sources, particulate organic matter (POM) showed the lowest δ13C values in both summer and winter, while the highest δ13C values were from macroalgae and seagrass in summer and winter, respectively

  • Our study demonstrated that grazing food chain was the main trophic pathway in eutrophic tropical seagrass meadows

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Summary

Introduction

Seagrass meadows are highly complex and productive marine ecological systems that provide numerous ecological services. They provide spawning grounds (Jiang et al, 2020), nursery regions (Madi Moussa et al, 2020), habitat, and predation refuge areas for abundant fish, crabs, and other invertebrates (Barry et al, 2021; Tew et al, 2021), but they provide nutrients and energy. Previous reports have suggested that living seagrass provided main carbon sources for numerous herbivores and invertebrates in non-eutrophic tropical seagrass meadows (Burkholder et al, 2012; Chiu et al, 2013; Villa et al, 2019)

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