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Article

Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopic Signatures of Zooplankton Taxa in Five Small Subalpine Lakes along a Trophic Gradient

1
CNR ISE Largo Tonolli 50, 28922 Verbania, Italy
2
DiSTA, University of Insubria, Via Valleggio 11, 22100 Como, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Water 2018, 10(1), 94; https://doi.org/10.3390/w10010094
Submission received: 9 October 2017 / Revised: 12 January 2018 / Accepted: 17 January 2018 / Published: 22 January 2018

Abstract

:
Interest in Stable Isotopes Analyses (SIA) is increasing in freshwater ecology to better clarify ecosystems’ functioning. By measuring carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures, food sources and organism trophic levels can be tracked, providing quantitative estimates of bi-dimensional niches. In order to describe some general patterns of carbon and nitrogen stable isotope signatures in lakes, we applied SIA to zooplankton community in five subalpine lakes sampled in spring and summer along a trophic gradient (from oligotrophy to hypereutrophy). Within zooplankton taxa, temporal variation in food sources and trophic levels were compared to find out taxon-specific patterns. Carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures differed among the five lakes, reflecting depth, topography, and trophic status of the lakes. Carbon isotopic signatures varied more considerably in deeper and larger lakes (Mergozzo and Pusiano) than in a shallower and smaller lake (Lake Endine). Nitrogen isotopic signatures were generally more enriched in lakes Pusiano and Moro than in Lake Mergozzo, whereas in summer, they were depleted in all lakes. These observations indicate that zooplankton taxa specific trophic roles differed among lakes and in time.

1. Introduction

Stable isotopes are increasingly used in aquatic ecological studies to clarify food web functioning by quantifying carbon and nitrogen flows through water ecosystems [1]. The great advantage of this approach is that complex interactions among organisms are simultaneously captured [2,3,4], providing information about roles of the different taxa in the environment.
The basic idea is that the isotope ratio of a consumer depends on its diet. Stable carbon isotope ratio (δ13C‰) reflects the input of carbon revealing the contributions of different food sources, and nitrogen isotope (δ15N‰) indicates the trophic role because a consumer is typically enriched with respect to its diet (e.g., [5,6,7,8]).
Increasing δ15N enrichment is usually observed with the increasing lake trophic status [9,10,11]. Carbon contents of planktonic grazers and their food sources differ in response to trophic status in lakes, mainly because of differences in contribution of phytoplankton to the food sources [10]. On the other hand, less to more 13C-depleted carbon signatures from littoral to pelagic carbon sources are observed (e.g., [6,12]).
Lake ecosystem functioning is influenced by length and complexity of food webs, which in turn vary with environmental conditions. In this context, zooplankton plays a crucial role, linking primary producers to secondary consumers (e.g., zooplankton predators and fish) in a dynamic process, affecting transfer of matter and energy through lake ecosystems.
Complexity of trophic interactions increases along with lake size: increasing area and depth allow for increasing taxa and competitors, with a higher degree of specialization of predators to prey [13].
In the present study, we compared carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures of zooplankton taxa in five minor subalpine Italian lakes with different trophic status to outline some patterns already observed in other natural and artificial lakes. We tested if the baseline and the role of different zooplankton taxa vary depending on lake trophic status and size and along seasons.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Sites

Five Southern subalpine lakes located within the River Po catchment basin (Northern Italy) at an altitude between 194 and 389 m a.s.l. (Figure 1 and Table 1) were selected as representative of different trophic status (from the hypereutrophic lakes Pusiano and Comabbio to the oligotrophic Lake Mergozzo) and size (from the small and shallow Lake Comabbio to the deepest and relatively large Lake Mergozzo).
All lakes, except Lake Moro, are located in anthropized areas, and the vegetation of all catchment basin is composed by permanent meadows, softwood, and hardwood [14,15].
The principal morpho-edaphic characteristic of the five lakes are reported in Table 1. All lakes, except Lake Mergozzo, may be covered with ice during very cold winters. As in most temperate lakes, the zooplankton community of these lakes is composed of cold and warm stenothermal and eurythermal taxa (Table S1).

2.2. Zooplankton Sampling and SIA

Zooplankton samples were collected at the deepest part of the lake during growing season in spring (May) and late summer (September) 2004 by vertical hauls with a 126 µm light plankton nylon net of 20 cm-diameter opening mouth and preserved in ethanol 95%. Crustacean zooplankton were sorted by taxa in two replicates, oven-dried (60 °C for 48 h), finely ground, and transferred into tin capsules. Because of different feeding habits of copepod developmental stages, we performed SIA only on samples made up of adults and/or sub-adults of cyclopoids and diaptomids, respectively. Depending on individual body weight, between 50 and 600 specimens were necessary to get 1 mg d.w./replicate sample. Samples were sent to the G.G. Hatch Stable Isotope Laboratory of Ottawa (Ottawa, ON, Canada) for SIA analyses (Continuous Flow Isotope-Ratio Mass Spectrometry for δ13C, δ15N). Data were reported in delta (δ) notation, the units expressed as ‰ and defined as δ = ((Rx − Rstd)/Rstd) × 1000, where R is the ratio of the abundance of the heavy to the light isotope, x denotes sample and std is the abbreviation for standard. All δ15N was reported as ‰ vs. AIR and normalized to internal standards calibrated to International standards IAEA-N1 (+0.4‰), IAEA-N2 (+20.3‰), USGS-40 (−4.52‰), and USGS-41 (47.57‰). All δ13C was reported as ‰ vs. V-PDB and normalized to internal standards calibrated to International standards IAEA-CH-6 (−10.4‰), NBS-22 (−29.91‰), USGS-40 (−26.24‰), and USGS-41 (37.76‰).
On each date, Daphnia signatures identified lake-specific pelagic baseline, representing time-specific signature of seston particles (in a range 1.2–50 µm), fueling the pelagic food web [5,6,8,12,20,21,22]. Taxa-specific signatures were referred to time-specific baseline signatures, allowing for tracing seasonal changes of deeper vs. more surficial carbon sources and relative position in the food web.
Carbon isotopic distance with respect to baseline (ID = δ13Cconsumer − δ13Cbaseline) was used to identify pelagic carbon sources (ID ≤ 0.8 ± 1.1) [2]. We calculated taxa-specific enrichment (E = δ15Nconsumer − δ15Nbaseline) to infer trophic position of each taxa with respect to the baseline.

3. Results

Carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures of baseline were lake and season-specific (Figure 2). In spring, δ13C ranged between high depleted values (ca. −36 δ13C‰ in lakes Pusiano and Moro) and the least depleted value of Lake Comabbio (−20 δ13C‰). In summer, δ13C signatures were less 13C depleted than in spring in three out of five lakes, namely, Mergozzo, Pusiano, and Moro. An opposite trend characterized the shallowest Lake Comabbio, with a more 13C depleted carbon signature in summer than in spring. The lowest seasonal range of variation (of ca. 2 δ13C‰) was measured in Lake Endine. In spring, more enriched baseline δ15N signatures characterized lakes Pusiano and Moro, while Lake Mergozzo was the least enriched. In summer, nitrogen isotopic signatures were less enriched than in spring in all lakes but Comabbio, in which no seasonal variation was measured. Despite of the clear difference in the isotopic fingerprint of the baselines among lakes, we did not find statistically significant correlations between them and morpho-edaphic characteristics.
In spring, cyclopoids and diaptomids were the most enriched with respect to the baseline (Figure 3a and Figure 4a,b). Marked differences were found among lakes δ15N signatures, while the range of variation in δ13C was relatively small.
Lakes Pusiano and Moro lay on the top of the trophochemical graph, the former also characterized by an almost complete overlapping of isotopic signatures of cyclopoids and diaptomids; in the latter, cyclopoids were more enriched than diaptomids with respect to the baseline (respectively 5.47 δ15N‰ and 3.28 δ15N‰). In both lakes Pusiano and Moro, copepods were tightly linked with pelagic carbon sources. In Lake Mergozzo, carbon sources of cyclopoids were clearly separated from the pelagic isotopic signature, being more δ13C depleted than the baseline. In this lake, as in all others, cyclopoids had the highest δ15N‰ in spring. Diaptomids were closely related to the cyclopoids for nitrogen isotopic signature, and the enrichment with respect to the pelagic baseline was high (5.70 δ15N‰). In Lake Endine, diaptomids and cyclopoids shared similar δ15N signatures, while being well separated for δ13C signature: cyclopoids relying upon pelagic carbon sources, and diaptomids being more δ13C depleted than pelagic baseline carbon signature. In Lake Endine, diaptomids appeared tightly related to Bosmina, with respect to which they were δ15N‰ enriched of ca. 5. Enrichment of the cyclopoids with respect to Daphnia was also high (4.06). Carbon fractionation between diaptomids and the pelagic baseline is indicative of deeper food sources than those integrated by Daphnia and better represented by Bosmina. The most distinct isotopic signatures were those of Lake Comabbio, in which carbon signatures of diaptomids and of the pelagic baseline were the least depleted, while being δ15N enrichment substantial (4.93), although lower than in Lake Mergozzo (5.70).
Differences among the lakes were clearer in summer, when the range of variation in carbon signatures was larger than in spring, ranging between the least depleted taxa signatures from Lake Mergozzo to the most depleted taxa signatures of Lake Endine (Figure 3b). In the latter, Diaphanosoma signatures fully overlapped the pelagic baseline. Diaptomids also relied on pelagic food sources, although thanks to their nitrogen isotopic signature, they were the most enriched with respect to the baseline (6.70; Figure 4a,b).
A full overlapping between Daphnia and Bosmina and a close similarity with Diaphanosoma characterized Lake Endine’s summer signatures, where diaptomids were the most δ15N-enriched. In this lake, between-season variation was the least for both carbon and nitrogen signatures. Intermediate carbon signatures characterized lakes Moro and Comabbio. Lake Mergozzo’s zooplankton signatures were on the right and bottom part of the trophochemical graph. In this lake, Diaphanosoma was clearly separated from Bosmina and from the Daphnia pelagic baseline, being characterized by the least δ13C-depleted signature. Leptodora was δ15N enriched with respect to Diaphasomoma, sharing a carbon signature intermediate between those of Daphnia, Diaphanosoma, and Bosmina. On the other side, isotopic signature of Bythotrephes was consistent with those of Daphnia (representing the pelagic carbon baseline), with δ15N-enrichment of 3.08. In this lake, the cyclopoids were clearly separated from all other taxa and from the pelagic baseline, being carbon signature highly depleted (δ13C = −28.30) and nitrogen signature highly enriched (δ15N = 7.24).
Changes in time in C isotopic values of the baseline were substantial, ranging between most 13C-depleted values in spring to least depleted values in summer (extremes being −36.74‰ of cyclopoids in Lake Moro in spring and −20.46 of Bosmina in Lake Mergozzo in summer; Table S2). The least δ13C-depleted signature was measured in Lake Comabbio, in which a large variability in δ15N signature was measured in the diaptomids. Least depleted summer carbon isotopic signatures were measured in all lakes but Endine, where temporal variations of all taxa were very small. In Lake Mergozzo, within time variation in diaptomids’ carbon isotopic signature was wider than that of Daphnia, but as in most lakes, variability in δ15N was very small.

4. Discussion

Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope signatures are lake-specific. In deeper lakes, more depleted carbon signatures are expected than in shallower ones; lakes with a higher trophic status are usually more enriched in δ15N than those with a lower trophic status [9,10,11].
Our dataset spanned from the shallowest Lake Comabbio to the deepest Lake Mergozzo, also including the small and relatively deep Lake Moro, which is characterized by cold waters. The dataset also comprised the oligotrophic Lake Mergozzo and the hypereutrophic Lake Pusiano, thus covering a wide range of lake trophic status. Our results confirm some general patterns. In the deep subalpine Lake Mergozzo, seasonal changes in taxa-specific signatures were consistent with those observed in other deep subalpine lakes, such as Lake Maggiore [12]. With summer thermal stratification, carbon signature of the pelagic baseline tends towards less 13C depleted values. This observation probably reflects changes in phytoplankton isotopic signature [21]. Phytoplankton, during growth season, exhibits δ13C values less negative, because of reduced isotopic carbon fractionation at high cell densities and/or a shift on exploitation of HCO3 as carbon source instead of CO2 [21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31]. Daphnia, being an unselective filter-feeder integrates seston particle up to a size fitting the intersetular distance of filtering combs, in turn depending on Daphnia body size. In deep subalpine lakes, seston ≤50 µm is mainly composed by phytoplankton algal cells [32]. Carbon fractionation with respect to seston is therefore negligible, and seasonal changes in Daphnia carbon signature entirely overlap those of phytoplankton, thus providing a reliable pelagic baseline [6,8,33,34,35]. Changes in carbon baseline signature with thermal stratification in turn reflect changes in taxa composition and carbon dynamics of phytoplankton in the upper water layers [6,20,21].
According to this interpretation, also in lakes Pusiano and Moro, summer thermal stratification led to increased contribution of the upper layers to phytoplankton production in summer. In Lake Comabbio, and to a lesser extent in Lake Endine, such change is not confirmed, the summer carbon signature of both Daphnia pelagic baseline and the diaptomids being more δ13C depleted than in spring. Such opposite pattern is consistent with a recruitment of Daphnia cucullata and of Eudiaptomus padanus from the lake littoral, characterized by less negative carbon values (e.g., [36]), into the lake profundal during spring. Horizontal migration of zooplankton has been well documented in a number of cases, such as Eudiaptomus padanus in the deep nearby Lake Maggiore [36].
Very close or overlapping carbon and nitrogen signatures of primary consumers, such as Bosmina and Diaphanosoma, suggest the exploitation of the same food sources in Lake Endine, particularly in summer. In Lake Mergozzo, isotopic signatures suggest that Diaphanosoma, Daphnia, and Eudiaptomus have a very similar trophic role, with Bosmina being well separated from the other three zooplankton taxa, clearly relying upon more superficial (or more littoral) carbon sources. The least δ13C-depleted signature, in fact, is indicative of warmer waters or littoral sources. Spatial and temporal variations in carbon and nitrogen isotopic signatures in different compartments of a single lake were assessed by former studies [37,38]. Previous research on Lake Maggiore demonstrated that littoral carbon isotopic signature follows the same pattern as pelagic carbon with increasingly less depleted 13C values in summer than in spring, the shift being responsible for a clear separation of littoral with respect to pelagic isotopic fingerprint [6,12].
Previous work on Lake Maggiore [6,12] suggested a relatively narrow range of carbon isotopic signature of cyclopoids, along with a clear separation from summer pelagic signature. The two peculiar traits are interpreted as a clear specificity of habitat and food selection [37]. Our dataset only partially confirms these two traits: while separation with respect to summer pelagic carbon is confirmed in lakes Moro and Mergozzo, such is not the case in lakes Pusiano and Endine, where cyclopoids do not show differences with respect to pelagic carbon signature in summer. Seasonal variability of carbon signature was small in lakes Endine and Moro, while being very large, almost comparable to that of the unselective filter-feeder Daphnia, in the other lakes. Different taxa may contribute along the season to the cyclopoids: in Lake Pusiano, where variability was the largest, three species have been reported, namely Cyclops abyssorum, Mesocyclops leuckarti, and Thermocyclops hyalinus. Previous studies have suggested interspecific differences of cyclopoid copepod species in the exploitation of food sources (e.g., [38,39]) and their relative trophic position [37]. Moreover, while Cyclops is known to grow and reach maximum density during cold months, the other two species tend to increase during the warm season. Such a strong seasonality explains the wide range of variability in carbon signature measured in this lake. The same explanation can be recalled for Lake Mergozzo, where a transition between C. abyssorum and the smaller-sized M. leuckarti and Mesocyclops hyalinus is known to occur in summer [40,41]. Δ15N enrichment confirms some traits found in other lakes, independently from their size, typology, and trophy. In particular, cyclopoids were the most enriched in all but Lake Endine, in which the diaptomids were more enriched than the cyclopoids [20]. The small seasonal variability of δ15N signature also suggests a small plasticity in trophic position in all lakes but Pusiano, the hypereutrophic lake. In this lake, the cyclopoids relied upon the pelagic signature also in summer.

5. Conclusions

Isotopic signatures can be regarded as fingerprints of lake ecosystems, integrating site-specific traits related to lake trophy and typology. According to our results, some traits, such as the trend toward less depleted 13C and less enriched 15N signatures in summer than in spring, were confirmed, although with some exceptions. While in thermally stratified lakes, such a transition was detected, in the shallowest, Lake Comabbio, the prevalence of a horizontal gradient was likely responsible for the opposite pattern. On the other hand, while the hypereutrophic Lake Pusiano was the most δ15N enriched as expected, substantially high levels of δ15N signature were also detected in the small, oligotrophic, and deep Lake Moro, the coldest lake among those analyzed.
Our results overall confirm the importance of taxa-specific analyses within zooplankton community, which is essential for understanding trophic relationships, changes in habitat, and carbon sources fueling the pelagic food web.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/1/94/s1.

Author Contributions

All authors contributed equally to the paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The founding sponsors had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, and in the decision to publish the results.

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Figure 1. Satellite view of studied lakes (from Google Earth).
Figure 1. Satellite view of studied lakes (from Google Earth).
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Figure 2. Carbon and nitrogen isotopic fingerprint of the pelagic baselines (Daphnia) in spring (green) and summer (red) in all lakes.
Figure 2. Carbon and nitrogen isotopic fingerprint of the pelagic baselines (Daphnia) in spring (green) and summer (red) in all lakes.
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Figure 3. Trophochemical graph of zooplankton taxa signatures in spring (a) and summer (b). Error bars represent the Standard Error. CYC: cyclopoids; DPT: diaptomids; DAP: Daphnia; BOS: Bosmina; DPH: Diaphanosoma; BYT: Bythotrephes; LEP: Leptodora.
Figure 3. Trophochemical graph of zooplankton taxa signatures in spring (a) and summer (b). Error bars represent the Standard Error. CYC: cyclopoids; DPT: diaptomids; DAP: Daphnia; BOS: Bosmina; DPH: Diaphanosoma; BYT: Bythotrephes; LEP: Leptodora.
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Figure 4. (a) Carbon isotopic distance (ID) of zooplankton taxa with respect to the baseline (Daphnia) in the studied lakes. ID values ranging between −1.9 and +1.9 are highlighted by the grey bar; (b) Nitrogen enrichment (E) of zooplankton taxa relying upon lake pelagic baseline (Daphnia). CYC: cyclopoids; DPT: diaptomids; BOS: Bosmina; DPH: Diaphanosoma; BYT: Bythotrephes; LEP: Leptodora.
Figure 4. (a) Carbon isotopic distance (ID) of zooplankton taxa with respect to the baseline (Daphnia) in the studied lakes. ID values ranging between −1.9 and +1.9 are highlighted by the grey bar; (b) Nitrogen enrichment (E) of zooplankton taxa relying upon lake pelagic baseline (Daphnia). CYC: cyclopoids; DPT: diaptomids; BOS: Bosmina; DPH: Diaphanosoma; BYT: Bythotrephes; LEP: Leptodora.
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Table 1. Morpho-edaphic characteristics of studied lakes [16,17,18,19] (Ptot: total phosphorus).
Table 1. Morpho-edaphic characteristics of studied lakes [16,17,18,19] (Ptot: total phosphorus).
LakeAltitude (m a.s.l.)Geographic Coordinates (Latitude Longitude)Mixing RegimeVolume (106 m3)Depthmax (m)Ptot (µg L−1)
Mergozzo19445°57′20″ N
8°27′52″ E
monomictic83731
Moro38945°52′47″ N
10°09′25″ E
meromictic4428
Endine33445°46′41″ N
9°56′22″ E
dimictic12917
Comabbio24345°45′55″ N
8°41′37″ E
polymictic16872
Pusiano25945°48′09″ N
9°16′17″ E
monomictic692474

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Piscia, R.; Boggio, E.; Bettinetti, R.; Mazzoni, M.; Manca, M. Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopic Signatures of Zooplankton Taxa in Five Small Subalpine Lakes along a Trophic Gradient. Water 2018, 10, 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/w10010094

AMA Style

Piscia R, Boggio E, Bettinetti R, Mazzoni M, Manca M. Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopic Signatures of Zooplankton Taxa in Five Small Subalpine Lakes along a Trophic Gradient. Water. 2018; 10(1):94. https://doi.org/10.3390/w10010094

Chicago/Turabian Style

Piscia, Roberta, Emanuela Boggio, Roberta Bettinetti, Michela Mazzoni, and Marina Manca. 2018. "Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopic Signatures of Zooplankton Taxa in Five Small Subalpine Lakes along a Trophic Gradient" Water 10, no. 1: 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/w10010094

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