Abstract

Detritivory is the dominant trophic paradigm in most terrestrial, aquatic, and marine ecosystems, yet accurate measurement of consumer trophic position within detrital (=“brown”) food webs has remained unresolved. Measurement of detritivore trophic position is complicated by the fact that detritus is suffused with microbes, creating a detrital complex of living and nonliving biomass. Given that microbes and metazoans are trophic analogues of each other, animals feeding on detrital complexes are ingesting other detritivores (microbes), which should elevate metazoan trophic position and should be rampant within brown food webs. We tested these hypotheses using isotopic (15N) analyses of amino acids extracted from wild and laboratory‐cultured consumers. Vertebrate (fish) and invertebrate detritivores (beetles and moths) were reared on detritus, with and without microbial colonization. In the field, detritivorous animal specimens were collected and analyzed to compare trophic identities among laboratory‐reared and free‐roaming detritivores. When colonized by bacteria or fungi, the trophic positions of detrital complexes increased significantly over time. The magnitude of trophic inflation was mediated by the extent of microbial consumption of detrital substrates. When detrital complexes were fed to vertebrate and invertebrate animals, the consumers registered similar degrees of trophic inflation, albeit one trophic level higher than their diets. The wild‐collected detritivore fauna in our study exhibited significantly elevated trophic positions. Our findings suggest that the trophic positions of detrital complexes rise predictably as microbes convert nonliving organic matter into living microbial biomass. Animals consuming such detrital complexes exhibit similar trophic inflation, directly attributable to the assimilation of microbe‐derived amino acids. Our data demonstrate that detritivorous microbes elevate metazoan trophic position, suggesting that detritivory among animals is, functionally, omnivory. By quantifying the impacts of microbivory on the trophic positions of detritivorous animals and then tracking how these effects propagate “up” food chains, we reveal the degree to which microbes influence consumer groups within trophic hierarchies. The trophic inflation observed among our field‐collected fauna further suggests that microbial proteins represent an immense contribution to metazoan biomass. Collectively, these findings provide an empirical basis to interpret detritivore trophic identity, and further illuminate the magnitude of microbial contributions to food webs.

Highlights

  • This issue may be distilled into a few basic questions: How do microbes shape the trophic identities of metazoans in brown food webs? What is the trophic position of a given detrital mass at a given point in time? And what are the trophic positions of detritivores feeding on such detritus? To adequately address the issue of detritivore trophic identity, a more comprehensive trophic framework—one that includes microbes within an empirically derived trophic hierarchy—will be needed

  • This means that the trophic positions of the single most abundant, massive, and ubiquitous trophic group have not been measured with known, high accuracy

  • We show that the presence of detritivorous bacteria and fungi in brown food chains elevates significantly the trophic positions of detritivorous fauna, including the detrital complex, itself

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The majority of global primary productivity is not consumed as living tissues, but rather as nonliving detritus (Colinvaux, 1978; Moore et al, 2004; Polis & Strong, 1996). The assessment of animal trophic position needs to accommodate the fact that detritus is a heterogeneous complex and trophically dynamic, which would provide varying proportions of detrital versus microbial protein when consumed en masse by meso-­or macrofauna (Brose & Scheu, 2014; Moore & de Ruiter, 2012; Moore et al, 2004) As these fauna consume significant quantities of microbe-­suffused plant detritus, they consume fellow heterotrophs. While the microbial decomposition of detritus has been evidenced via 15N enrichment in soil communities (Hyodo et al, 2008; Ponsard & Arditi, 2000; Tayasu & Hyodo, 2010), the heterogeneous and dynamic nature of the detrital complex can complicate the interpretation of the trophic positions of microbes and detritivorous metazoans This issue may be distilled into a few basic questions: How do microbes shape the trophic identities of metazoans in brown food webs? We characterize the foundational trophic roles of microbes, explain the high 15N signals often observed among detritivorous fauna (Chahartaghi, Langel, Scheu, & Ruess, 2005; Hyodo et al, 2008, 2014; Maraun et al, 2011; Miller et al, 2012; Okuzaki, Tayasu, Okuda, & Sota, 2009), and show that a broad diversity of field-­collected detritivores closely mirrored the trophic patterns observed among our laboratory-­reared detritivores

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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