Plankton and Benthos Research
Online ISSN : 1882-627X
Print ISSN : 1880-8247
ISSN-L : 1880-8247
Note
Cellulase activity and stable isotope signature of benthic macroinvertebrates in estuarine habitats: potential assimilation of land-derived organic matter
Gen Kanaya , Aya Tanimura, Takatoshi Niiyama, Haruhiko Toyohara
Author information
  • Gen Kanaya

    National Institute for Environmental Studies

  • Aya Tanimura

    Graduate School of Agriculture

  • Takatoshi Niiyama

    Graduate School of Agriculture

  • Haruhiko Toyohara

    Graduate School of Agriculture

Corresponding author

ORCID
Keywords: benthic invertebrate, δ13C and δ15N, detritus, digestive enzymes, feeding habit
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2019 Volume 14 Issue 4 Pages 315-319

Details
  • Published: November 27, 2019 Received: May 07, 2019 Released on J-STAGE: November 25, 2019 Accepted: July 16, 2019 Advance online publication: - Revised: -
Download PDF (768K)
Download citation RIS

(compatible with EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)

BIB TEX

(compatible with BibDesk, LaTeX)

How to download citation
Contact us
Abstract

We investigated inter-species dietary variation and potential cellulose digestion of 12 macroinvertebrate taxa collected from two locations in the estuarine Idoura Lagoon, Sendai Bay. All taxa exhibited cellulase activity (CA), which was higher among surface-deposit feeders (bivalve Macoma contabulata, polychaete Tylorrhynchus osawai, and ocypodid crabs) and obligatory suspension feeders (bivalves Corbicula japonica and Nuttallia japonica) (0.108 to 0.764 μmol min−1 mg-protein−1). In contrast, CA was lower among facultative suspension-feeding and deep-deposit feeding polychaetes (Hediste spp. and Heteromastus sp., respectively), and was lowest in the deep-deposit feeding polychaete Notomastus sp. The stable isotope ratios of the macroinvertebrates differed among feeding groups. A δ13C-based isotope mixing model revealed that the major dietary component of the surface-deposit feeders was microphytobenthos (34–50%), regardless of their high CAs. Although CAs of obligatory and facultative suspension feeders were comparable to or lower than those of surface-deposit feeders, they were highly dependent on river-derived materials at the station near the freshwater input (38–59%). These results indicate that CA is a common physiological characteristic of macroinvertebrates in estuarine soft-bottom habitats, but the dietary contribution of riverine detritus is not correlated with enzymatic activity. Our findings indicate that several factors affect the realized dietary components of macroinvertebrates, including feeding mode, the selectivity of ingestion, and digestive enzyme activity.

References (16)
Related articles (0)
Figures (0)
Content from these authors
Supplementary material (0)
Result List ()
Cited by (5)
© 2019 The Japanese Association of Benthology
Previous article Next article
Top

Register with J-STAGE for free!

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /