Parasitism is arguably the most commonly occurring consumer strategy. However, only a few food web studies assess how well stable isotopes reflect the trophic position of parasitic consumers and results are variable. Even fewer studies have measured the nutrient transfer by parasitic consumers, hindering an assessment of their role in nutrient transfer through food webs. Here we used a food chain consisting of a diatom as host, a chytrid as its parasitic consumer and a rotifer as the predatory consumer of the chytrid, to assess the trophic position of all three food-chain components using their natural 13C and 15N isotope signatures, and to measure the nitrogen transfer from the host via the chytrid to the rotifer by tracing 15N of a labell...
Traditional bulk isotopic analysis is a pivotal tool for mapping consumer–resource interactions in f...
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters....
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters....
Parasitism is arguably the most commonly occurring consumer strategy. However, only a few food web s...
International audienceMicrobial parasites have only recently been included in planktonic food web st...
According to modern oceanographic perspectives that emphasize microbial pathways, phagotrophic proti...
Food webs are structured by intricate nodes of species interactions which govern the flow of organic...
Nitrogen stable isotope (δ15N) signatures of coral and skeletal tissues are commonly used to identif...
1) Stable isotopes are widely used for studying trophic relationships, but variation driven by envir...
Increasingly, stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (d15N) and carbon (d13C) are used to quantify trophi...
Increasingly, stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (d15N) and carbon (d13C) are used to quantify trophi...
Parasitism, although the most common type of ecological interaction, is usually ignored in food web ...
Increasingly, stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (δ(15)N) and carbon (δ(13)C) are used to quantify tr...
1. Stable isotopes have been sporadically used over the last two decades to characterise host-parasi...
AbstractParasitism, although the most common type of ecological interaction, is usually ignored in f...
Traditional bulk isotopic analysis is a pivotal tool for mapping consumer–resource interactions in f...
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters....
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters....
Parasitism is arguably the most commonly occurring consumer strategy. However, only a few food web s...
International audienceMicrobial parasites have only recently been included in planktonic food web st...
According to modern oceanographic perspectives that emphasize microbial pathways, phagotrophic proti...
Food webs are structured by intricate nodes of species interactions which govern the flow of organic...
Nitrogen stable isotope (δ15N) signatures of coral and skeletal tissues are commonly used to identif...
1) Stable isotopes are widely used for studying trophic relationships, but variation driven by envir...
Increasingly, stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (d15N) and carbon (d13C) are used to quantify trophi...
Increasingly, stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (d15N) and carbon (d13C) are used to quantify trophi...
Parasitism, although the most common type of ecological interaction, is usually ignored in food web ...
Increasingly, stable isotope ratios of nitrogen (δ(15)N) and carbon (δ(13)C) are used to quantify tr...
1. Stable isotopes have been sporadically used over the last two decades to characterise host-parasi...
AbstractParasitism, although the most common type of ecological interaction, is usually ignored in f...
Traditional bulk isotopic analysis is a pivotal tool for mapping consumer–resource interactions in f...
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters....
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters....