Abstract

Stable isotope ratios are used to reconstruct animal diet in trophic ecology via mixing models. Several assumptions of stable isotope mixing models are critical, i.e., constant trophic discrimination factor and isotopic equilibrium between the consumer and its diet. The isotopic turnover rate (λ and its counterpart the half-life) affects the dynamics of isotopic incorporation for an organism and the isotopic equilibrium assumption: λ involves a time lag between the real assimilated diet and the diet estimated by mixing models at the individual scale. Current stable isotope mixing model studies consider neither this time lag nor even the dynamics of isotopic ratios in general. We developed a mechanistic framework using a dynamic mixing model (DMM) to assess the contribution of λ to the dynamics of isotopic incorporation and to estimate the bias induced by neglecting the time lag in diet reconstruction in conventional static mixing models (SMMs). The DMM includes isotope dynamics of sources (denoted δs), λ and frequency of diet-switch (ω). The results showed a significant bias generated by the SMM compared to the DMM (up to 50% of differences). This bias can be strongly reduced in SMMs by averaging the isotopic variations of the food sources over a time window equal to twice the isotopic half-life. However, the bias will persist (∼15%) for intermediate values of the ω/λ ratio. The inferences generated using a case study highlighted that DMM enhanced estimates of consumer’s diet, and this could avoid misinterpretation in ecosystem functioning, food-web structure analysis and underlying biological processes.

Highlights

  • The use of stable isotope ratios as natural recorders in biotic and abiotic molecules has provided strong support for deciphering ecological processes [1]

  • Note that when λ is intermediate or high, isotopic equilibrium was reached in 250 d or 25 d respectively, while it was not the case with the lowest λ value

  • The isotopic incorporation dynamics of consumers are mainly driven by the isotopic turnover rate which leads to a time lag in the isotopic equilibrium between the isotopic values of the consumer and its diet

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Summary

Objectives

The specific aims of this paper were i) to implement λ into a SMM; ii) to use mechanistic simulations of δc in order to estimate food source proportions and the bias occurring when a SMM is applied rather than a DMM; iii) to illustrate the differences in DMM over SMM when estimating food source proportions using case-study data in an inferential framework and; iv) to provide recommendations when using DMMs in isotopic approaches

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