Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina
The use of stable carbon isotopes as dietary tracers is an application that is widening its scope within the fields of ecology and paleoecology. Although hair is potentially one of the most favorable animal tissues for isotopic measurement for dietary studies, this tissue is rarely included in resea...
Guardado en:
Publicado: |
2002
|
---|---|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello |
Aporte de: |
id |
paper:paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello |
---|---|
record_format |
dspace |
spelling |
paper:paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello2023-06-08T15:00:36Z Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina carbon 13 carbon isotope diet hair isotopic analysis stable isotope tracer animal food animal tissue Argentina Artiodactyla carnivore conference paper dietary intake ecology hair analysis herbivory nonhuman paleoecology trophic level Argentina Jujuy Province The use of stable carbon isotopes as dietary tracers is an application that is widening its scope within the fields of ecology and paleoecology. Although hair is potentially one of the most favorable animal tissues for isotopic measurement for dietary studies, this tissue is rarely included in research works. This may be due to the fact that many aspects related to hair tissue are not fully understood, especially in the case of wild animals whose diets consist of plants with contrasting 13C/12C ratios, their abundance depending on seasonality. The present isotopic study of hair from animals inhabiting the Andes in northwestern Argentina, at heights ranging from 3500 to about 5000 in above sea level (asl) shows that 1) δ 13C values measured on hair from herbivores with a mixed and isotopically contrasting diet, and from their carnivorous predators, differ in their respective trophic levels, 2) in primary consumers, different types of hair from the same individual have different δ13C values, whereas hair values are homogeneous in carnivores, and 3) some types of hair from rodents, such as whiskers, show δ13C values similar to those of less metabolically active tissues such as bone collagen. 2002 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello |
institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
collection |
Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
carbon 13 carbon isotope diet hair isotopic analysis stable isotope tracer animal food animal tissue Argentina Artiodactyla carnivore conference paper dietary intake ecology hair analysis herbivory nonhuman paleoecology trophic level Argentina Jujuy Province |
spellingShingle |
carbon 13 carbon isotope diet hair isotopic analysis stable isotope tracer animal food animal tissue Argentina Artiodactyla carnivore conference paper dietary intake ecology hair analysis herbivory nonhuman paleoecology trophic level Argentina Jujuy Province Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina |
topic_facet |
carbon 13 carbon isotope diet hair isotopic analysis stable isotope tracer animal food animal tissue Argentina Artiodactyla carnivore conference paper dietary intake ecology hair analysis herbivory nonhuman paleoecology trophic level Argentina Jujuy Province |
description |
The use of stable carbon isotopes as dietary tracers is an application that is widening its scope within the fields of ecology and paleoecology. Although hair is potentially one of the most favorable animal tissues for isotopic measurement for dietary studies, this tissue is rarely included in research works. This may be due to the fact that many aspects related to hair tissue are not fully understood, especially in the case of wild animals whose diets consist of plants with contrasting 13C/12C ratios, their abundance depending on seasonality. The present isotopic study of hair from animals inhabiting the Andes in northwestern Argentina, at heights ranging from 3500 to about 5000 in above sea level (asl) shows that 1) δ 13C values measured on hair from herbivores with a mixed and isotopically contrasting diet, and from their carnivorous predators, differ in their respective trophic levels, 2) in primary consumers, different types of hair from the same individual have different δ13C values, whereas hair values are homogeneous in carnivores, and 3) some types of hair from rodents, such as whiskers, show δ13C values similar to those of less metabolically active tissues such as bone collagen. |
title |
Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina |
title_short |
Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina |
title_full |
Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina |
title_fullStr |
Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina |
title_full_unstemmed |
Stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of Jujuy, Argentina |
title_sort |
stable carbon isotope measurements on hair from wild animals from altiplanic environments of jujuy, argentina |
publishDate |
2002 |
url |
https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00338222_v44_n3_p709_Panarello |
_version_ |
1768544399955853312 |