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Can species guilds act as hubs for energy transfer in macrophyte meadows of Amazonian floodplain lakes?

Ana Cristina B OliveiraCarlos E C FreitasMarc PouillyKedma Cristine YamamotoLawrence Edward HurdPieter A P deHartJamerson A SantosCarlos Eduardo RezendeMarcelo G DE AlmeidaFlavia Kelly Siqueira-Souza
Published in: Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias (2024)
Aquatic macrophytes are the main autochthonous component of primary production in the Amazon Basin. Floating meadows of these plants support habitats with highly diverse animal communities. Fishes inhabiting these habitats have been assumed to use a broad range of food items and compose a particular food web. We employed carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) stable isotope analysis to draw the trophic structure of these habitats and to trace the energy flow by its trophic levels. Fishes and other animals from 18 independent macrophyte meadows of a floodplain lake of the Solimões River (Amazonia, Brazil) were analyzed. The food web of macrophyte meadows consists of four trophic levels above autotrophic sources. In general, primary consumers exhibited a broader range of food sources than the upper trophic levels. Some fish species depended on a large number of food sources and at the same time are consumed by several predators. The energy transfer from one trophic level to the next was then mainly accomplished by these species concentrating a high-energy flux and acting as hubs in the food web. The broad range of δ13C values observed indicates that the organisms living in the macrophyte meadows utilize a great diversity of autotrophic sources.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • human health
  • drinking water
  • risk assessment
  • quantum dots
  • climate change
  • amino acid