Abstract

Spatial variation in food resources strongly influences many aspects of aquatic consumer ecology. Although large-scale controls over spatial variation in many aspects of food resources are well known, others have received little study. Here we investigated variation in the fatty acid (FA) composition of seston and primary consumers within (i.e., among habitats) and among tributary systems of Lake Michigan, USA. FA composition of food is important because all metazoans require certain FAs for proper growth and development that cannot be produced de novo, including many polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs). Here we sampled three habitat types (river, rivermouth and nearshore zone) in 11 tributaries of Lake Michigan to assess the amount of FA in seston and primary consumers of seston. We hypothesize that among-system and among-habitat variation in FAs at the base of food webs would be related to algal production, which in turn is influenced by three land cover characteristics: 1) combined agriculture and urban lands (an indication of anthropogenic nutrient inputs that fuel algal production), 2) the proportion of surface waters (an indication of water residence times that allow algal producers to accumulate) and 3) the extent of riparian forested buffers (an indication of stream shading that reduces algal production). Of these three land cover characteristics, only intense land use appeared to strongly related to seston and consumer FA and this effect was only strong in rivermouth and nearshore lake sites. River seston and consumer FA composition was highly variable, but that variation does not appear to be driven by the watershed land cover characteristics investigated here. Whether the spatial variation in FA content at the base of these food webs significantly influences the production of economically important species higher in the food web should be a focus of future research.

Highlights

  • Food quality has been shown to strongly influence the behavior, physiology, ecological interactions and evolution of aquatic consumers [1,2,3]

  • For seston the following analyses focus on gFA, but the trends are similar for polyunsaturated FAs (PUFAs), MUFAs and the individual fatty acids measured here

  • We predicted that land cover controls over algal production might lead to relationships between land cover and FA content in seston and primary consumers

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Summary

Introduction

Food quality has been shown to strongly influence the behavior, physiology, ecological interactions and evolution of aquatic consumers [1,2,3]. Some aspects of food quality appear to vary greatly among aquatic systems. FAs function as structural elements (primarily in cell membranes), energy storage molecules and precursors to signaling hormones [7,9,10]. The quantity and composition of FA in food resources constitute an important aspect of food quality for aquatic consumers. Limitations in dietary FAs have been shown to limit cladoceran population growth, fish over-winter survival, prey capture by visual-feeding fish, and a large range of other survivalrelated behaviors and functions [7,13,14,15,16,17,18]

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