@article{697c95082b1e4bed9b46c51f9f651b3e,
title = "Unraveling the multiple bottom-up supplies of an Antarctic nearshore benthic community",
abstract = "Disentangling the bottom-up controls of natural ecosystems is key to understanding the capacity of local communities to resist natural and anthropogenic disturbances. Here, we used carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios with a Bayesian multiple source mixing model to trace diverse food sources supporting the benthic trophic network in Fildes Bay (South Shetland Island, Western Antarctic Peninsula). Individuals of 16 species of consumers and five potential food sources (e.g. inter- and subtidal macroalgae, suspended and sinking particulate organic matter, and particulate organic matter from sediment) were collected during January and February 2017. The results showed that benthic organisms of Fildes Bay assimilate a broad range of available organic matter: most of the energy channeled to upper trophic consumers comes from organic matter in the surface sediment, whereas energy moving among lower trophic consumers comes largely from macroalgae and pelagic primary food sources. Overall, our evidence indicates that the present-day nearshore benthic community of Fildes Bay relies on different primary food sources, channeling bottom-up supplies through multiple pathways, which leads to highly stable systems in the face of current scenarios of global change.",
keywords = "Benthos, Ecosystem stability, Food web, Isotopic analysis, Maxwell Bay, Polar, Trophic ecology, Western Antarctic Peninsula",
author = "L. Zenteno and L. C{\'a}rdenas and N. Valdivia and I. G{\'o}mez and J. H{\"o}fer and I. Garrido and Pardo, {L. M.}",
note = "Funding Information: The authors acknowledge financial support from the grants INACH RG 20-16 , Fondecyt 1161129 , and FONDAP IDEAL 15150003 . Thanks to Paulina Br{\"u}ning, Mateo C{\'a}ceres, Hans Bartsch, and Bastian Garrido for field assistance: both diving and laboratory work. Logistical support provided by the Instituto Ant{\'a}rtico Chileno (INACh) and the staff of Base Julio Escudero Station, King George Island, is greatly appreciated. The studies in the Antarctic were carried out under permission granted by INACh in accordance with the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty. The study did not involve Antarctic Specially Protected Areas (ASPAs), nor sampling of protected or endangered species. Funding Information: The authors acknowledge financial support from the grants INACH RG 20-16, Fondecyt 1161129, and FONDAP IDEAL 15150003. Thanks to Paulina Br?ning, Mateo C?ceres, Hans Bartsch, and Bastian Garrido for field assistance: both diving and laboratory work. Logistical support provided by the Instituto Ant?rtico Chileno (INACh) and the staff of Base Julio Escudero Station, King George Island, is greatly appreciated. The studies in the Antarctic were carried out under permission granted by INACh in accordance with the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty. The study did not involve Antarctic Specially Protected Areas (ASPAs), nor sampling of protected or endangered species. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 Elsevier Ltd",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.pocean.2018.10.016",
language = "English",
volume = "174",
pages = "55--63",
journal = "Progress in Oceanography",
issn = "0079-6611",
}