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Stable nitrogen isotopes as indicators of anthropogenic activities in small freshwater systems

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2001

Year

Abstract

Stable nitrogen isotope ratios (δ15N) were measured in fish, mussel, and sediment samples taken from 17 small freshwater sites to examine food chain length and trophic position across sites affected by differing levels of anthropogenic activity. Both shoreline development and fish species composition varied greatly among sites, and a range of up to 11.2‰ was found for the δ15N values of largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides). Fish δ15N values were baseline corrected using unionid mussel (Elliptio complanata) δ15N values. Predators, such as largemouth bass and chain pickerel (Esox niger), exhibited normalized δ15N values that were less variable than those of benthic-feeding fishes. Relationships between δ15N and dissolved inorganic nitrogen concentrations indicated that δ15N was a valid descriptor of eutrophication at sites with low dissolved inorganic nitrogen concentrations. The fraction of residential land in buffer zones surrounding sites was correlated with fish δ15N, indicating that urban development, and presumably human wastewater, resulted in elevated δ15N values in these small freshwater systems.