1. Differences in urbanization and degree of marine influence are reflected in δ 13C and δ 15N of producers and consumers in seagrass habitats of Puerto Rico
- Author
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Olsen, Ylva S., Fox, Sophia E., Kinney, Erin L., Teichberg, Mirta, and Valiela, Ivan
- Subjects
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URBANIZATION , *MARINE ecology , *SEAGRASSES , *HABITATS , *STABLE isotopes , *TURTLE grass , *INDUSTRIAL wastes - Abstract
Abstract: Couplings between land use and marine food webs in tropical systems are poorly understood. We compared land–sea coupling in seven sites around Puerto Rico, differing in the degree of precipitation and urbanization, by measuring δ 13C and δ 15N in producers and consumers. δ 15N values were influenced by human activity: the food web from sites near urbanized centers was on average 1‰ heavier in δ 15N compared to undeveloped sites. This is most likely due to wastewater inputs from septic systems relatively near the shoreline. Changes in δ 13C were best explained by differences in the degree of marine influence. Where terrestrial inputs from a major river dominated, δ 13C values were lighter, whereas sites further from land and in locations exposed to oceanic currents had heavier δ 13C values, characteristic of a marine source of dissolved organic carbon. We found no significant effect of precipitation on connectivity in spite of a twofold difference in annual average rainfall between the north and south coast. The results suggest there is some connectivity between land and sea in Puerto Rico, despite high rates of evaporation relative to precipitation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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