| Literature DB >> 26559186 |
Marie-Andrée Giroux1, Éliane Valiquette1, Jean-Pierre Tremblay1,2, Steeve D Côté1.
Abstract
Documenting habitat-related patterns in foraging behaviour at the individual level and over large temporal scales remains challenging for large herbivores. Stable isotope analysis could represent a valuable tool to quantify habitat-related foraging behaviour at the scale of individuals and over large temporal scales in forest dwelling large herbivores living in coastal environments, because the carbon (δ13C) or nitrogen (δ15N) isotopic signatures of forage can differ between open and closed habitats or between terrestrial and littoral forage, respectively. Here, we examined if we could detect isotopic differences between the different assemblages of forage taxa consumed by white-tailed deer that can be found in open, closed, supralittoral, and littoral habitats. We showed that δ13C of assemblages of forage taxa were 3.0 ‰ lower in closed than in open habitats, while δ15N were 2.0 ‰ and 7.4 ‰ higher in supralittoral and littoral habitats, respectively, than in terrestrial habitats. Stable isotope analysis may represent an additional technique for ecologists interested in quantifiying the consumption of terrestrial vs. marine autotrophs. Yet, given the relative isotopic proximity and the overlap between forage from open, closed, and supralittoral habitats, the next step would be to determine the potential to estimate their contribution to herbivore diet.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26559186 PMCID: PMC4641657 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142781
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Anticosti Island (Canada) with the three sectors of the study area.
Number of samples per taxa and habitat used to estimate the isotopic differences between habitats on Anticosti Island, Québec (Canada).
| TAXA | HABITAT | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Closed canopy | Open | Supralittoral | Littoral | |||
| Canopy opening | Cut | Peatland | ||||
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Fig 2Carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures (δ13C and δ15N) of habitat-specific assemblages of forage taxa used by white-tailed deer on Anticosti Island, Canada.
We show the average signatures (± SD) of the four habitat types.