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Beyond macronutrients: element variability and multi-element stoichiometry in freshwater invertebrates Abstract: We contrasted concentrations of macronutrients
(C, N and P), essential (As, Cu, Zn and Se) and non-essential metals
(Pb, Hg and Cd) in invertebrates across five lakes and June to October
in one lake. We predicted that somatic concentrations of tightly regulated
elements would be less variable than weakly and unregulated elements.
Within each taxon, variation was lowest in macronutrients, intermediate
in essential micronutrients, and highest in non-essential metals, which
corresponded in rank to homeostatic regulation strength for the same
elements calculated from the literature. Hence, homeostatic regulation
may strongly influence variation in element concentrations of biota
in situ. Of the individual elements, only taxonomic differences in
C and N were consistent across lakes and over a season. Nevertheless,
canonical discriminant analyses successfully discriminated among taxa
based on taxonomic multielement composition. Thus, relative taxonomic
differences in multielement composition appear more informative than
absolute stoichiometric formulae when considering the role of inherently
variable trace elements in ecological investigations.
Karimi R, Folt, C.L. Beyond macronutrients: element variability and multi-element stoichiometry in freshwater invertebrates. Ecology Letters. 2006 9: 1273-1283. |
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