English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT
  The power and pitfalls of amino acid carbon stable isotopes for tracing the use and fate of basal resources in food webs

Vane, K., Cobain, M. R. D., & Larsen, T. (2023). The power and pitfalls of amino acid carbon stable isotopes for tracing the use and fate of basal resources in food webs. EcoEvoRxiv, X2VG6G. doi:10.32942/X2VG6G.

Item is

Files

show Files
hide Files
:
gea0057pre.pdf (Preprint), 8MB
Name:
gea0057pre.pdf
Description:
OA
OA-Status:
Green
Visibility:
Public
MIME-Type / Checksum:
application/pdf / [MD5]
Technical Metadata:
Copyright Date:
-
Copyright Info:
-

Locators

show

Creators

show
hide
 Creators:
Vane, Kim, Author
Cobain, Matthew R. D., Author
Larsen, Thomas1, Author           
Affiliations:
1Department of Archaeology, Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology, Max Planck Society, ou_3398738              

Content

show
hide
Free keywords: biotracer; food-web tracing; fingerprints; microbes; patterns; review; spatiotemporal
 Abstract: Natural and anthropogenic stressors are spatiotemporally complex, having indirect effects on the composition and biomass of organisms at the base of a food web, and their availability and nutritional quality. Because basal organisms synthesise the biomolecules essential for metazoan growth and survival (i.e. basal resources), understanding the connections between basal resources and consumers across diverse time scales is needed to fully comprehend their impact on food webs. Traditional approaches using bulk stable isotope ratios have provided insight into basal resource use, but lack specificity in identifying multiple basal resources and their transfer through ecosystems. The development of compound-specific stable isotope analyses now allows researchers to trace the trophic transfer of specific biomolecules. This paper provides an overview of the advances and challenges associated with tracing basal resources with carbon stable isotopes in amino acids (δ13C-AA). We develop a conceptual framework for understanding the mechanistic underpinning of δ13C-AA values. Subsequently, formal definitions of associated terminologies that have so far been lacking in the literature are proposed. We empirically highlight the diagnostic ability of the relative offsets between δ13C values of essential amino acids, termed δ13C-EAA patterns. As these offsets remain largely unaltered during trophic transfer and across varying environments, they can be used as fingerprints to trace spatiotemporal shifts in basal resource use within food webs. Given the stable preservation of amino acids in many metazoan tissues, δ13C-EAA fingerprints can provide insights into basal resource use in food webs from geological history through to the contemporary. The added value of non-essential amino acids as metabolic biomarkers are explored and demonstrated in an archaeological context. We provide thorough overviews of the analytical and statistical methodologies involved in making robust inferences in food web studies. The constraints and pitfalls of δ13C-AA data are discussed, such as issues with basal resource specificity, de novo synthesis, and problems with large compilation datasets. Taken together, δ13C-AA values provide a powerful tool for understanding the specific use of basal resources in food webs on various spatiotemporal scales, but careful consideration and characterization of basal resources is necessary to ensure accurate estimations of proportional use

Details

show
hide
Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2023-05-19
 Publication Status: Published online
 Pages: 120
 Publishing info: -
 Table of Contents: 1. Introduction
2. Factors shaping amino acid δ13C values in basal resources
2.1. Conceptualising amino acid δ13C values
2.2. Isotope fractionation in metabolic networks
3. Discriminating basal resources with δ13C-EAA fingerprints
3.1. The diagnostic potential of δ13C-EAA patterns among basal resources
3.2. Considerations for microbial δ13C-EAA patterns
3.3 From δ13C-EAA patterns to fingerprints
3.4. Optimal characterisation of δ13C-EAA fingerprints
4. Amino acids from a consumer perspective
4.1. Applying δ13C-EAA fingerprints in ecological studies
4.2. Tracing EAA sources in consumers with (endo)symbiotic relationships
5. Beyond fingerprinting
5.1. Factors affecting δ13CNEAA values in animals
5.2. Exploring full δ13C amino acid datasets
5.3. Baseline isotope values as complementary markers on basal resources
6. Considerations for using archival tissues
6.1. Spatiotemporal resolutions with consumer tissues
6.2. Natural and artificial preservation of tissues
7. Minimising analytical uncertainties in the measurements of δ13CAA values
7.1. Purification of amino acid samples
7.2. Error propagation, accuracy and precision in measurements of δ13C-AA values
8. From qualifying to quantifying basal resource contributions
8.1. Consolidating basal resource information
8.2. Modelling consumer behaviour
8.3. Mixing model output: Interpretation and considerations
8.4. Conceptualising the quantification of basal resource EAA use
9. Perspectives on δ13C-AA applications in food web ecology
 Rev. Type: No review
 Identifiers: DOI: 10.32942/X2VG6G
 Degree: -

Event

show

Legal Case

show

Project information

show

Source 1

show
hide
Title: EcoEvoRxiv
Source Genre: Web Page
 Creator(s):
SORTEE: the Society for Open, Reliable, and Transparent Ecology and Evolutionary biology, Developer              
Affiliations:
-
Publ. Info: -
Pages: - Volume / Issue: - Sequence Number: X2VG6G Start / End Page: - Identifier: URN: https://ecoevorxiv.org/