Trophic enrichment without change in diet An ontogenetic shift in &delta15N during insect metamorphosis


Meeting Abstract

35.4  Jan. 5  Trophic enrichment without change in diet: An ontogenetic shift in &delta15N during insect metamorphosis TIBBETS, T. M.*; WHEELESS, L. A.; University of Wyoming ttibbets@uwyo.edu

Analyses of nitrogen and carbon stable isotopes are widely used as tools in the study of food web structures and to estimate an animal�s trophic position. Most food web studies assume that an enrichment in 15N in an animal�s tissues represents a shift in trophic level. We examined the effect of metamorphosis on the 15N trophic enrichment between the tissues of several species of holometabolous insects and their diet. We measured the &delta15N of larval, pupal, and adult stages of four Lepidoptera (Bombyx mori, Galleria mollonella, Manduca sexta, and Vanessa cardui), one Diptera (Sarcophaga sp.), and one Coleoptera (Tenebrio molitor). As expected, we found that the tissues of insect larvae were enriched in 15N relative to their diet. The enrichment in 15N between larvae and diet was explained by the production of frass significantly depleted in 15N. Surprisingly, we found that the tissues of adult insects were significantly enriched in 15N relative to larvae in all but one species (T. molitor). Because we measured the adult tissues immediately after they emerged from pupal cases, the enrichment was not due to a change in diet. Rather, it was due to the excretion of 15N depleted metabolic waste (�meconium�) that resulted from protein metabolism during metamorphosis. Our results suggest that 15N enrichment during metamorphosis is significant, that discrimination during metamorphosis is variable across taxa, and that one cannot assume adult holometabolous insects reflect larval or larval diet 15N values.

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