Abstract
Research on the interaction of primary producers and consumers is crucial for understanding trophic transfer in intertidal food webs. This study explores the association between epilithic and planktonic microalgae, and gut contents of two targeted intertidal gastropods, the periwinkle Echinolittorina radiata (splash zone) and the limpet Cellana toreuma (mid-intertidal zone). With the application of gut fluorescence technique and metabarcoding, this study investigates the quantity and composition of two different sources of microalgae (epilithic and planktonic) and the food ingested by the gastropods. The results suggest the following findings: 1) The planktonic microalgae have higher compositional similarity to the gut contents of grazing gastropods. 2) Increased gut pigment content in C. toreuma is observed with increasing abundance of epilithic and planktonic microalgae. However, there was no such pattern observed for E. radiata. This difference could be attributed to potentially divergent foraging behaviours of the two species that inhabit different shore heights.
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