Abstract

The success of many sessile invertebrates in marine benthic communities is linked to their ability to efficiently remove suspended organic matter from the surrounding water column. To investigate the diet of the barnacle Amphibalanus eburneus, a dominant suspension feeder within the Indian River Lagoon (IRL) of central Florida, we compared the stable isotopes ratios (δ13C and δ15N) of barnacle tissue to those of particulate organic matter (POM). Collections were carried out quarterly for a year from 29 permanent sites and at sites impacted by an Aureoumbra lagunensis bloom. δ13C and δ15N values of Amphibalanus eburneus varied across sites, but δ15N was more stable over time. There was a range of δ15N values of Amphibalanus eburneus tissue from 6.0‰ to 10.5‰ across sites. Because land-based sources such as sewage are generally enriched in 15N, this suggests a continuum of anthropogenic influence across sites in the IRL. Over 70% of the variation in δ15N values of Amphibalanus eburneus across sites was driven by the δ15N values of POM, supporting a generalist feeding strategy on available sources of suspended organic matter. The dominance of this generalist consumer in the IRL may be linked to its ability to consume spatially and temporally variable food resources derived from natural and anthropogenic sources, as well as Aureoumbra lagunensis cells. Generalist consumers such as Amphibalanus eburneus serve an important ecological role in this ecosystem and act as a sentinel species and recorder of local, site-specific isotopic baselines.

Highlights

  • Organisms that can exploit suspended organic matter fill a unique niche in aquatic ecosystems (Ricciardi & Bourget, 1999; Riisgård & Larsen, 2010)

  • Data are shown as annual means and mean (Amphibalanus eburneus tissue) and single particulate organic matter (POM) values from an Aureoumbra lagunensis bloom in individual isotope values was assessed using a Kruskal–Wallis One-Way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA)

  • Data are shown as annual mean and mean (Amphibalanus eburneus tissue) and single POM values from an Aureoumbra lagunensis bloom in and I6–13) that had d15N values between 8.3‰ and 10.5‰ (Fig. 2A)

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Summary

Introduction

Organisms that can exploit suspended organic matter fill a unique niche in aquatic ecosystems (Ricciardi & Bourget, 1999; Riisgård & Larsen, 2010) By efficiently consuming both living cells and detritus, suspension feeders play critical roles in the regulation of primary production and benthic-pelagic coupling of nutrients and organic matter (Gili & Coma, 1998). This feeding mechanism is widely successful in estuarine and coastal ecosystems, and coincides with highly diverse communities in benthic habitats (Karlson & Osman, 2012; Cresson, Ruitton & Harmelin-Vivien, 2016). These sources of nutrition vary in size and quality and can include bacteria [from

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