Abstract

AbstractBenthic fauna plays an important role in mediating biogeochemical cycles in coastal areas by storing carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) in their body tissues at theoretically homeostatic rates. To maintain homeostasis, the benthic consumers need to be in balance with their resource supply or alter their stoichiometric traits in response to environmental change. However, we lack an understanding regarding the potential variation in the C : N : P content ratios of benthic consumers, especially in marine coastal areas where stoichiometric shifts in macrofauna could have strong effects on sediment carbon and nutrient cycling. By monitoring two sites over a year, we quantified the magnitude and temporal stability of benthic faunal carbon and nutrient pools in coastal soft‐sediment habitats. Our results show that benthic fauna is not strictly homeostatic, but instead expresses temporal variation in C : N : P content. These aquatic consumers undergo ontogenetic changes in diet and morphology, which alter their stoichiometric characteristics. In addition, the faunal C : N : P ratios showed strong seasonal variation at both species and community level, and our results suggest that the stoichiometric traits of benthic consumers shift in response to food sources and environmental conditions. The ability to adapt to varying stoichiometric conditions is essential in face of the growing C : N : P imbalance occurring in marine and coastal ecosystems as a consequence of anthropogenic activities. Therefore, it is critically important to identify the stoichiometric plasticity of different species, before environmental change causes a shift in benthic community composition that will alter functions on an ecosystem level.

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