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MEPS 157:147-157 (1997)

Abstract

Spatial and temporal variation in C:N:P ratios, delta15N, and delta13C of eelgrass Zostera marina as indicators of ecosystem processes, Tomales Bay, California, USA

James W. Fourqurean1,*, Thomas O. Moore2, Brian Fry1, James T. Hollibaugh3

1Department of Biological Sciences and Southeast Environmental Research Program, Florida International University,
Miami, Florida 33199, USA
2California State Department of Fish and Game, Marine Resources Division, PO Box 1560, Bodega Bay, California 94923, USA
3Department of Marine Science, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, USA

*E-mail: fourqure@fiu.edu

ABSTRACT: The nutrient content, delta15N, and delta13C of seagrasses in Tomales Bay (California, USA) vary in both space and time. The variations in these measurements were not random, but followed spatial and seasonal patterns that provide insight into the sources and processing of nutrients in the Tomales Bay ecosystem. Wide ranges of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus content of green leaves of Zostera marina were found in 72 samples collected over the 2 yr of sampling. Carbon content varied from 29.0 to 40.9% of dry weight, nitrogen from 1.13 to 3.79%, and phosphorus from 0.11 to 0.90%. Stable isotopic composition was variable as well: the mean delta15N for all samples collected was 9.7 ± 0.3o/oo with a range of 6.2o/oo. Carbon isotopic content had a range of 7.5o/oo, with a mean delta13C of -9.6 ± 0.2o/oo. There was a strong spatial trend in the N content, but not the P content, of Z. marina leaves from Tomales Bay. The C:N ratio was around 15 near the mouth of the bay and increased linearly with distance into the bay to ~25 near the head of the bay; there was a concomitant pattern of increasing delta15N of seagrass leaves, from 7o/oo near the mouth of the bay to near 12o/oo at the head of the bay. The spatial pattern in N content was only present during summer months, but the spatial pattern in stable isotopic composition was present in both summer and winter. The patterns in the N and delta15N content of the seagrasses indicate the importance of denitrification in the C and N cycles in Tomales Bay. The analysis of patterns in variation of elemental content and isotopic composition of seagrasses is a powerful tool for investigating ecosystem-scale processes in coastal marine systems. Similar analyses of seagrasses from less well studied ecosystems should provide data to generate hypotheses about spatial and temporal variation in processes in these other systems.

KEY WORDS: Seagrass · Ecosystems · Nitrogen · Phosphorus · Stable isotopes

Published in MEPS Vol. 157 (1997) on October 16
ISSN: 0171-8630. Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1997

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