Abstract

Isotopic variation of food stuffs propagates through trophic systems. But, this variation is dampened in each trophic step, due to buffering effects of metabolic and storage pools. Thus, understanding of isotopic variation in trophic systems requires knowledge of isotopic turnover. In animals, turnover is usually quantified in diet-switch experiments in controlled conditions. Such experiments usually involve changes in diet chemical composition, which may affect turnover. Furthermore, it is uncertain if diet-switch based turnover models are applicable under conditions with randomly fluctuating dietary input signals. Here, we investigate if turnover information derived from diet-switch experiments with dairy cows can predict the isotopic composition of metabolic products (milk, milk components and feces) under natural fluctuations of dietary isotope and chemical composition. First, a diet-switch from a C3-grass/maize diet to a pure C3-grass diet was used to quantify carbon turnover in whole milk, lactose, casein, milk fat and feces. Data were analyzed with a compartmental mixed effects model, which allowed for multiple pools and intra-population variability, and included a delay between feed ingestion and first tracer appearance in outputs. The delay for milk components and whole milk was ∼12 h, and that of feces ∼20 h. The half-life (t½) for carbon in the feces was 9 h, while lactose, casein and milk fat had a t½ of 10, 18 and 19 h. The 13C kinetics of whole milk revealed two pools, a fast pool with a t½ of 10 h (likely representing lactose), and a slower pool with a t½ of 21 h (likely including casein and milk fat). The diet-switch based turnover information provided a precise prediction (RMSE ∼0.2 ‰) of the natural 13C fluctuations in outputs during a 30 days-long period when cows ingested a pure C3 grass with naturally fluctuating isotope composition.

Highlights

  • Isotopic variation in food stuffs propagates through trophic systems generating isotopic tags in organisms at each trophic level [1]

  • Propagation of natural dietary isotopic variation was found in wildlife and livestock species, and in humans [3,4,5]

  • A delay can be expected from feed intake to first appearance of dietary isotopic signals in tissues [9], due to ingestion and passage time

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Isotopic variation in food stuffs propagates through trophic systems generating isotopic tags in organisms at each trophic level [1]. Propagation of natural dietary isotopic variation was found in wildlife and livestock species, and in humans [3,4,5]. Such dietary variation may result from differences in carbon isotopic discrimination between plants with different photosynthetic mechanisms and variation within each mechanism resulting from speciesspecific morpho-physiological properties and responses to environmental drivers [6,7]. The rate of incorporation of ‘‘new’’ diet isotopes and simultaneous loss of ‘‘old’’ isotopes in tissues of consumers is driven by metabolic processes, such as cycling and storage, and can be comprehensively quantified as isotopic turnover. The degree of attenuation is inversely related to turnover rate; attenuation is weak if turnover is fast and strong if turnover is slow

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call