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MEPS 174:301-306 (1998)
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Abstract
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Mapping trophic continua of benthic foodwebs: body size-d15N relationships
Robert France1,*, Mark Chandler2, Robert Peters3
1Harvard University, Graduate School of Design, 48 Quincy St., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA
2New England Aquarium, Central Wharf, Boston, Massachusetts 02110, USA
3Department of Biology, McGill University, 1205 Ave. Dr. Penfield, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1, Canada
*E-mail: rfrance@gsd.harvard.edu

ABSTRACT: The stable nitrogen isotopic composition (d15N) of benthic foodwebs was analyzed to determine trophic relationships among 23 taxa composited from 4 proximal oligotrophic lakes and 35 taxa composited from 2
proximal seagrass meadows. Because omnivory was prevalent, animals in both foodwebs existed along continua of trophic positions rather than in discrete trophic levels. These trophic continua were in turn related to organism body size in support of Elton's
early suppositions about foodweb structuring. These foodweb delineations developed due to feeding hierarchies being determined by size-related predation, resulting in 'upper triangular' foodweb matrices as posited by Cohen's cascade model. Expressing
aquatic foodweb structure in relation to the ataxonomic continuous variables of organismal trophic position (d15N) and body size has the advantage of providing a convenient common currency for comparative purposes
that dispenses with the artificiality and impossibility of constraining omnivorous animals into rigidly defined trophic levels.
KEY WORDS: Benthic foodwebs · Body size d15N · Trophic continua

Published in MEPS Vol.
174
(1998) on November 26
ISSN: 0171-8630.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1998
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