Stable isotopes were used to examine the origin of organic matter in Icelandic Ascophyllum - based habitats, the role of different organic matters in filling intertidal food webs and the food preferences of the most abundant suspension feeders, grazers and predators. We selected three intertidal sites on the SW coast of Iceland where we sampled in early September 2004, organic matter sources (POM, SOM and most abundant primary producers, A. nodosum and F. vesciculosus) and the most abundant macrofauna species (barnacles, mussels, gastropods, sponge and crabs). Even though the primary production (Ascophyllum - based) was the same at the three study sites, the isotopic composition of common-among-sites organisms varied due to local differences in the origin of available POM and SOM and in food web structures. © Springer-Verlag and AWI 2007.
CITATION STYLE
Sarà, G., De Pirro, M., Romano, C., Rumolo, P., Sprovieri, M., & Mazzola, A. (2007). Sources of organic matter for intertidal consumers on Ascophyllum-shores (SW Iceland): A multi-stable isotope approach. Helgoland Marine Research, 61(4), 297–302. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10152-007-0078-3
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