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Trophic ecology of a tropical aquatic and terrestrial food web: insights from stable isotopes (N-15)
ISSN
0266-4674
Date Issued
2006
Author(s)
DOI
10.1017/S0266467406003336
Abstract
We used stable isotope analysis (N-15/N-14) to characterize the trophic relationships of consumer communities of an aquatic food web (a permanent pond) and the adjacent terrestrial food web (secondary dry dipterocarp forest) from a seasonal tropical field site in north-eastern Thailand. In general, isotopic signatures of aquatic vertebrates were high er (delta N-15 range = 4.51-9.90%) than those of invertebrates (delta N-15 range = 1.10-6.00%). High N-15 signatures identified water snakes and swamp eels as top predators in the pond food web. In the terrestrial food web N-15 signatures of saprophagous litter invertebrates (diplopods, earthworms). termites, ants and beetle larvae were lower than in those of predatory invertebrates (scolopendrids, scorpions, whip spiders). Predatory terrestrial frogs and caecilians had lower N-15 signatures than snakes. indicating that snakes are among the top predators in the terrestrial web. Based on the distribution of isotopic signatures, we estimated five trophic levels for both the aquatic and terrestrial food web. The food chains of a seasonal tropical site studied were rather short. which implies similarities to the structure of temperate food webs.