Literature DB >> 34963785

Tissue-specific Isotopic Incorporation Turnover Rates and Trophic Discrimination Factors in the Freshwater Shrimp Macrobrachium borellii (Crustacea: Decapoda: Palaemonidae).

María Florencia Viozzi1, Carlos Martínez Del Rio2, Verónica Williner1,3.   

Abstract

The interpretation of isotopic data in ecology requires knowledge about two factors: turnover rate and the trophic discrimination factor, which have not been well described in freshwater shrimps. We performed a 142-day diet shift experiment on 174 individuals of the omnivorous shrimp Macrobrachium borellii, measured their growth, and temporally serially sampled muscle and hepatopancreas tissue to quantify carbon and nitrogen incorporation rates and isotope discrimination factors. Shrimps were fed with artificial diets (δ13C = -26.1‰, δ15N= 2.1‰) for 45 days in attempt to standardize the shrimps' initial δ13C and δ15N values for subsequent experiments. Shrimps were then fed with another artificial diet (δ13C = -16.1‰, δ15N = 15.8‰) and the change in δ13C and δ15N was observed for a period of 97 days. The trophic discrimination factor (∆) for δ13C was significantly higher in hepatopancreas (0.7 ± 0.36‰) than in muscle (-0.1 ± 0.83‰); however, the opposite was the case for δ15N (1.7 ± 0.43‰ and 3.6 ± 0.42‰, respectively). In the hepatopancreas the mean residence time (τ) of 13C was 26.3 ± 4.3 days compared to a residence time of 16.6 ± 5.51 days for δ15N, whereas the τ in muscle was 75.8 ± 25 days for δ13C and 40 ± 25 days for δ15N. The rate of incorporation of carbon into muscle was higher than that predicted by allometric equations relating isotopic incorporation rate to body mass that was developed previously for invertebrates. Our results support ranges of traditional trophic discrimination factor values observed in muscles samples of different taxa (∆15N around 3‒3.5‰ and ∆13C around 0‒1‰), but our work provides evidence that these traditionally used values may vary in other tissues, as we found that in the hepatopancreas ∆15N is around 1.7‰.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Carbon, Nitrogen; Hepatopancreas; Muscle; Stable isotopes

Year:  2021        PMID: 34963785      PMCID: PMC8652415          DOI: 10.6620/ZS.2021.60-32

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Zool Stud        ISSN: 1021-5506            Impact factor:   2.058


  20 in total

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6.  The impact of protein quality on stable nitrogen isotope ratio discrimination and assimilated diet estimation.

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7.  Predicting rates of isotopic turnover across the animal kingdom: a synthesis of existing data.

Authors:  Stephen M Thomas; Thomas W Crowther
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8.  Turnover rates of nitrogen stable isotopes in the salt marsh mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus, following a laboratory diet switch.

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9.  Protein turnover, amino acid profile and amino acid flux in juvenile shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei: effects of dietary protein source.

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Review 10.  Stable isotope turnover and half-life in animal tissues: a literature synthesis.

Authors:  M Jake Vander Zanden; Murray K Clayton; Eric K Moody; Christopher T Solomon; Brian C Weidel
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-01-30       Impact factor: 3.240

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  1 in total

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