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Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis

Stable isotopes of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur are used as ecological tracers for a variety of applications, such as studies of animal migrations, energy sources, and food web pathways. Yet uncertainty relating to the time period integrated by isotopic measurement of animal tissues can confound the...

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Autores principales: Vander Zanden, M. Jake, Clayton, Murray K., Moody, Eric K., Solomon, Christopher T., Weidel, Brian C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4321325/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25635686
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116182
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author Vander Zanden, M. Jake
Clayton, Murray K.
Moody, Eric K.
Solomon, Christopher T.
Weidel, Brian C.
author_facet Vander Zanden, M. Jake
Clayton, Murray K.
Moody, Eric K.
Solomon, Christopher T.
Weidel, Brian C.
author_sort Vander Zanden, M. Jake
collection PubMed
description Stable isotopes of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur are used as ecological tracers for a variety of applications, such as studies of animal migrations, energy sources, and food web pathways. Yet uncertainty relating to the time period integrated by isotopic measurement of animal tissues can confound the interpretation of isotopic data. There have been a large number of experimental isotopic diet shift studies aimed at quantifying animal tissue isotopic turnover rate λ (%·day(-1), often expressed as isotopic half-life, ln(2)/λ, days). Yet no studies have evaluated or summarized the many individual half-life estimates in an effort to both seek broad-scale patterns and characterize the degree of variability. Here, we collect previously published half-life estimates, examine how half-life is related to body size, and test for tissue- and taxa-varying allometric relationships. Half-life generally increases with animal body mass, and is longer in muscle and blood compared to plasma and internal organs. Half-life was longest in ecotherms, followed by mammals, and finally birds. For ectotherms, different taxa-tissue combinations had similar allometric slopes that generally matched predictions of metabolic theory. Half-life for ectotherms can be approximated as: ln (half-life) = 0.22*ln (body mass) + group-specific intercept; n = 261, p<0.0001, r(2) = 0.63. For endothermic groups, relationships with body mass were weak and model slopes and intercepts were heterogeneous. While isotopic half-life can be approximated using simple allometric relationships for some taxa and tissue types, there is also a high degree of unexplained variation in our models. Our study highlights several strong and general patterns, though accurate prediction of isotopic half-life from readily available variables such as animal body mass remains elusive.
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spelling pubmed-43213252015-02-18 Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis Vander Zanden, M. Jake Clayton, Murray K. Moody, Eric K. Solomon, Christopher T. Weidel, Brian C. PLoS One Research Article Stable isotopes of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur are used as ecological tracers for a variety of applications, such as studies of animal migrations, energy sources, and food web pathways. Yet uncertainty relating to the time period integrated by isotopic measurement of animal tissues can confound the interpretation of isotopic data. There have been a large number of experimental isotopic diet shift studies aimed at quantifying animal tissue isotopic turnover rate λ (%·day(-1), often expressed as isotopic half-life, ln(2)/λ, days). Yet no studies have evaluated or summarized the many individual half-life estimates in an effort to both seek broad-scale patterns and characterize the degree of variability. Here, we collect previously published half-life estimates, examine how half-life is related to body size, and test for tissue- and taxa-varying allometric relationships. Half-life generally increases with animal body mass, and is longer in muscle and blood compared to plasma and internal organs. Half-life was longest in ecotherms, followed by mammals, and finally birds. For ectotherms, different taxa-tissue combinations had similar allometric slopes that generally matched predictions of metabolic theory. Half-life for ectotherms can be approximated as: ln (half-life) = 0.22*ln (body mass) + group-specific intercept; n = 261, p<0.0001, r(2) = 0.63. For endothermic groups, relationships with body mass were weak and model slopes and intercepts were heterogeneous. While isotopic half-life can be approximated using simple allometric relationships for some taxa and tissue types, there is also a high degree of unexplained variation in our models. Our study highlights several strong and general patterns, though accurate prediction of isotopic half-life from readily available variables such as animal body mass remains elusive. Public Library of Science 2015-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4321325/ /pubmed/25635686 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116182 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vander Zanden, M. Jake
Clayton, Murray K.
Moody, Eric K.
Solomon, Christopher T.
Weidel, Brian C.
Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis
title Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis
title_full Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis
title_fullStr Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis
title_short Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis
title_sort stable isotope turnover and half-life in animal tissues: a literature synthesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4321325/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25635686
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116182
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