Dear colleagues,

On behalf of the team, I am pleased to share our new publication 
“Compound-specific isotope analyses of harp seal teeth: tools for trophic 
ecology reconstruction” published in Marine Ecology Progress Series.

The paper is available here: DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13867

ABSTRACT: As sentinels of ecosystem health, high trophic level predators 
integrate information through all levels of the food web. Their tissues can be 
used to investigate spatiotemporal variability in foraging behaviour, and with 
the appropriate analytical methods and tools, archived samples can be used to 
reconstruct past trophic interactions. Harp seal (Pagophilus groenlandicus) 
teeth collected in the 1990s from the Northwest Atlantic were analysed for bulk 
stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes (δ13Cbulk and δ15Nbulk), and 
compound-specific stable nitrogen isotopes of amino acids (δ15NAA) for the 
first time. We developed a fine-scale, annual growth layer group (GLG) dentine 
sub-sampling method corresponding to the second and third year of life. In 
accordance with previous diet studies, while there was individual variability 
in δ15Nbulk, δ13Cbulk and δ15NAA measurements, we did not detect significant 
differences in isotopic niche widths between males and females, or between 
GLGs. Relative trophic position was calculated as the baseline-corrected δ15NAA 
values using trophic (glutamic acid) and source (phenylalanine and glycine) 
amino acids. Variability was measured between individuals in their relative 
trophic position, but within-individual variability was low, suggesting that 
they fed at the same trophic level over these 2 years of life. These novel 
δ15NAA data may therefore suggest individual, specialist harp seal foraging 
behaviour in sub-adults. Our findings show that compound-specific stable 
isotope signatures of archived, inert predator tissues can be used as tools for 
the retrospective reconstruction of trophic interactions on broad 
spatiotemporal scales.

Best wishes,


Jo Kershaw



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