首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America >Millennial-scale isotope records from a wide-ranging predator show evidence of recent human impact to oceanic food webs
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Millennial-scale isotope records from a wide-ranging predator show evidence of recent human impact to oceanic food webs

机译:来自范围广泛的捕食者的千禧年规模的同位素记录显示了最近人类对海洋食物网的影响的证据

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摘要

Human exploitation of marine ecosystems is more recent in oceanic than near shore regions, yet our understanding of human impacts on oceanic food webs is comparatively poor. Few records of species that live beyond the continental shelves date back more than 60 y, and the sheer size of oceanic regions makes their food webs difficult to study, even in modern times. Here, we use stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes to study the foraging history of a generalist, oceanic predator, the Hawaiian petrel (Pterodroma sandwichensis), which ranges broadly in the Pacific from the equator to near the Aleutian Islands. Our isotope records from modern and ancient, radiocarbon-dated bones provide evidence of over 3,000 y of dietary stasis followed by a decline of ca. 1.8‰ in δ15N over the past 100 y. Fishery-induced trophic decline is the most likely explanation for this sudden shift, which occurs in genetically distinct populations with disparate foraging locations. Our isotope records also show that coincident with the apparent decline in trophic level, foraging segregation among petrel populations decreased markedly. Because variation in the diet of generalist predators can reflect changing availability of their prey, a foraging shift in wide-ranging Hawaiian petrel populations suggests a relatively rapid change in the composition of oceanic food webs in the Northeast Pacific. Understanding and mitigating widespread shifts in prey availability may be a critical step in the conservation of endangered marine predators such as the Hawaiian petrel.
机译:在海洋中,人类对海洋生态系统的开发比沿海地区更近。但是,我们对人类对海洋食物网影响的理解相对较差。几乎没有生活在大陆架之外的物种记录可以追溯到60年前,而且海洋区域的巨大规模使它们的食物网变得难以研究,即使在现代也是如此。在这里,我们使用稳定的碳和氮同位素研究通才,海洋捕食者夏威夷海燕(Pterodroma sandwichensis)的觅食历史,夏威夷海燕在太平洋的广泛范围,从赤道到阿留申群岛附近。我们从放射性碳年代记的骨头的现代和古代的同位素记录提供了超过3,000 y的饮食停滞的证据,随后钙的下降。过去100 yδ 15 N为1.8‰。渔业引起的营养下降是这种突然转变的最可能的解释,这种突然转变发生在觅食地点不同的遗传上不同的种群中。我们的同位素记录还表明,与营养水平明显下降同时,海燕种群之间的觅食隔离显着减少。由于通体捕食者饮食结构的变化可以反映出猎物可利用性的变化,因此夏威夷海燕分布范围广泛的觅食变化表明东北太平洋海洋食物网的组成变化相对较快。了解和缓解猎物可利用性的广泛变化可能是保护濒临灭绝的海洋掠食者(例如夏威夷海燕)的关键步骤。

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