1. The nitrogen (δ15N) and carbon (δ13C) isotope ratios of animal tissues can help identify the composition of diets and open up a myriad of ecological applications. However, consumers do not ingest or assimilate all components of food items, and it is not well understood how sampling different tissues of sources and consumers may affect isotopic values ascribed, and thereby how such variation affects derived ecological measures. 2. Utilising a simple prey–predator feeding relationship in insects, we examined isotopic differences in soft, exoskeleton and whole tissues using samples with and without lipid extraction. As a derived ecological measure, we calculated trophic discrimination factors, changes in δ15N or δ13C between source and cons...
Stable isotope analysis of consumer tissues document patterns of resource use because data are linea...
Determining diet and trophic position of species with stable isotopes requires appropriate trophic e...
Robustly quantifying dietary resource use and trophic position using stable isotopes requires accura...
1. The nitrogen (δ15N) and carbon (δ13C) isotope ratios of animal tissues can help identify the comp...
1. Quantitative analytical approaches for isotopic niche analysis in the trophic diversity studies a...
1. The use of stable isotopic techniques to study animal diets and trophic levels requires a priori...
Proper application of stable isotopes (e.g., δ15N and δ13C) to food web analysis requires an underst...
rsity rm 2 e 3 15 carbon (13C / 12C) and nitrogen (15N / 14N) in animals ' tissues processes al...
The stable isotopes of carbon (13C /12C) and nitrogen (15N /14N) represent powerful tools in food-we...
The presence of lipids and urea in elasmobranch tissues can affect carbon (δ¹³C) and nitrogen (δ¹⁵N)...
Proper application of stable isotopes (e. g., delta N-15 and delta C-13) to food web analysis requir...
Individual variability in diet source selection has often been cited as the main factor for intra-sp...
Estimates of animal diets and trophic structure using stable isotope analysis are strongly affected ...
The isotopic niche has become an established concept in trophic ecology. However, the assumptions be...
Rationale: Stable isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N values) provide a unique perspective into the ecolog...
Stable isotope analysis of consumer tissues document patterns of resource use because data are linea...
Determining diet and trophic position of species with stable isotopes requires appropriate trophic e...
Robustly quantifying dietary resource use and trophic position using stable isotopes requires accura...
1. The nitrogen (δ15N) and carbon (δ13C) isotope ratios of animal tissues can help identify the comp...
1. Quantitative analytical approaches for isotopic niche analysis in the trophic diversity studies a...
1. The use of stable isotopic techniques to study animal diets and trophic levels requires a priori...
Proper application of stable isotopes (e.g., δ15N and δ13C) to food web analysis requires an underst...
rsity rm 2 e 3 15 carbon (13C / 12C) and nitrogen (15N / 14N) in animals ' tissues processes al...
The stable isotopes of carbon (13C /12C) and nitrogen (15N /14N) represent powerful tools in food-we...
The presence of lipids and urea in elasmobranch tissues can affect carbon (δ¹³C) and nitrogen (δ¹⁵N)...
Proper application of stable isotopes (e. g., delta N-15 and delta C-13) to food web analysis requir...
Individual variability in diet source selection has often been cited as the main factor for intra-sp...
Estimates of animal diets and trophic structure using stable isotope analysis are strongly affected ...
The isotopic niche has become an established concept in trophic ecology. However, the assumptions be...
Rationale: Stable isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N values) provide a unique perspective into the ecolog...
Stable isotope analysis of consumer tissues document patterns of resource use because data are linea...
Determining diet and trophic position of species with stable isotopes requires appropriate trophic e...
Robustly quantifying dietary resource use and trophic position using stable isotopes requires accura...