Trophic stability and change across a sea ice cover gradient on the western Antarctic Peninsula

Author:

Galloway AWE1,Schram JB2,Lowe AT3,Whippo R14,Heiser S5,Iken K6,McClintock JB7,Klein AG8,Amsler MO7,Amsler CD7

Affiliation:

1. Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, University of Oregon, Charleston, OR 97420, USA

2. Department of Natural Science, University of Alaska Southeast, Juneau, AK 99801, USA

3. Tennenbaum Marine Observatories Network, Smithsonian Institution, Edgewater, MD 21037, USA

4. NOAA National Ocean Service, National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, Kasitsna Bay Laboratory, Homer, AK 99603, USA

5. Marine Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX 78373, USA

6. College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775, USA

7. Department of Biology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35205, USA

8. Department of Geography, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA

Abstract

The western Antarctic Peninsula (AP) is experiencing significant changes to sea ice cover, altering the macroalgal cover and potentially affecting the foundation of benthic food webs. We used fatty acid signatures as dietary and physiological trophic biomarkers to test the hypothesis that a gradient of 36-88% mean annual ice cover would affect the trophic ecology of fleshy macroalgae and diverse benthic invertebrate consumers along the western AP. We used SCUBA to collect organisms from benthic rocky nearshore habitats, 5-35 m depth, at 15 study sites during April-May of 2019. There were no consistent ecosystem-scale differences in the nutritionally important polyunsaturated fatty acids or other univariate fatty acid summary categories in either the seaweeds or invertebrates across the ice gradient, but we did find site-level differences in the multivariate fatty acid signatures of all seaweeds and invertebrates. Ice cover was a significant driver of the fatty acid signatures of 5 invertebrates, including 3 sessile (an anemone, a sponge, and a tunicate) and 2 mobile consumers (a sea star and a sea urchin). The multivariate fatty acid signatures of 2 other sea stars and a limpet were not affected by the ice gradient. These results indicate that the trophic ecology and resource assimilation of sessile consumers that are more connected to the macroalgal-derived food web will be more sensitive than mobile consumers to impending changes to annual ice and macroalgal cover along the western AP.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

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