Resource utilization and trophic position of nematodes and harpacticoid copepods in and adjacent to Zostera noltii beds
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Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union
Abstract
This study examines the resource use and trophic
position of nematodes and harpacticoid copepods at the
genus/species level in an estuarine food web in Zostera noltii
beds and in adjacent bare sediments using the natural abundance
of stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes. Microphytobenthos
and/or epiphytes are among the main resources of
most taxa, but seagrass detritus and sediment particulate organic
matter contribute as well to meiobenthos nutrition,
which are also available in deeper sediment layers and in
unvegetated patches close to seagrass beds. A predominant
dependence on chemoautotrophic bacteria was demonstrated
for the nematode genus Terschellingia and the copepod family
Cletodidae. A predatory feeding mode is illustrated for
Paracomesoma and other Comesomatidae, which were previously
considered first-level consumers (deposit feeders) according
to their buccal morphology. The considerable variation
found in both resource use and trophic level among nematode
genera from the same feeding type, and even among
congeneric nematode species, shows that the interpretation
of nematode feeding ecology based purely on mouth morphology
should be avoided.
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A.M. Vafeiadou, P. Materatski, H. Adão, M. De Troch, and T. Moens, 2014. Resource utilization and trophic position of nematodes and harpacticoid copepods in and adjacent to Zostera noltii beds. Biogeosciences, 11, 4001–4014, 2014
www.biogeosciences.
net/11/4001/2014/doi:10.5194/bg-11-4001-2014 11: 1277-1308.