Differentiating aquatic mammal habitat and foraging ecology with stable isotopes in tooth enamel.

Oecologia

Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, 95064, USA.

Published: November 2001

We analyzed the carbon and oxygen isotope composition of tooth enamel from mammals inhabiting marine and terrestrial ecosystems to determine whether these stable isotopes were robust indicators of foraging and habitat preferences. Consumers were separated into six habitats (offshore, nearshore, kelp beds, estuarine, freshwater, terrestrial). Consumer δC values were correlated with the δC values of primary producers within each habitat, suggesting that δC values of tooth enamel are a viable proxy for foraging zones. Offshore and terrestrial consumer δC values were not significantly different, however, indicating that carbon isotope analysis alone is not sufficient to distinguish foraging within these two ecosystems. We propose that oxygen isotopes can be used along with δC values to further clarify habitat use. Oxygen isotopes were assessed as an indicator of habitat use. Consumers were grouped into four categories: aquatic-marine, aquatic-estuarine, aquatic-freshwater, and terrestrial. Populations of aquatic taxa had significantly lower standard deviations for δO values than those of terrestrial taxa. Mean δO values of aquatic taxa were significantly different among groups, but surprisingly, the mean values for freshwater taxa were higher than those for marine taxa. We conclude that variation in δO values of mammalian populations is a valid indicator of aquatic habits, but that mean δO values should be utilized with caution when trying to discriminate between marine and freshwater habitat use. Together, δC and δO values serve as valuable tools for identifying foraging and habitat preferences in modern marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and may provide similar information on ancient ecosystems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s004420100745DOI Listing

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