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Patterns of stable carbon isotope turnover in gag, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Mycteroperca microlepis</Emphasis>, an economically important marine piscivore determined with a non-lethal surgical biopsy procedure
Authors:James Nelson  Jeffrey Chanton  Felicia Coleman  Christopher Koenig
Institution:(1) Department of Oceanography, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA;(2) FSU Coastal and Marine Laboratory, 3618 Coastal Highway 98, St. Teresa, FL 32358-2702, USA
Abstract:To determine the feasibility of using stable isotopes to track diet shifts in wild gag, Mycteroperca microlepis, populations over seasonal timescales, we conducted a repeated measures diet-shift experiment on four adult gag held in the laboratory. Fish were initially fed a diet of Atlantic mackerel, Scomber scombrus, (mean δ13C = −21.3‰ ± 0.2, n = 20) for a period of 56 days and then shifted to a diet of pinfish, Lagodon rhomboids, (mean δ13C = −16.6‰ ± 0.6, n = 20) for the 256 day experiment. We developed a non-lethal surgical procedure to obtain biopsies of the muscle, liver, and gonad tissue monthly from the same four fish. We then determined the δ13C value of each tissue by isotope ratio mass spectrometry. For the gonad tissue we used the relationship between C/N and lipid content to correct for the influence of lipids on δ13C value. We observed a significant shift in the δ13C values of all of the tissues sampled in the study. Carbon turnover rates varied among the three tissues, but the shift in diet from mackerel to pinfish was clearly traceable through analysis of δ13C values. The turnover rates for muscle tissue were 0.005‰ day−1, and for gonad tissue was 0.009‰ day−1. Although it is generally thought that tissue turnover rates in ectotherms are driven primarily by growth, we found that metabolic rate can be a major factor driving tissue turnover in adult gag.
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