O. Schmidt et al., Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios in body tissue and mucus of feeding and fasting earthworms (Lumbricus festivus), OECOLOGIA, 118(1), 1999, pp. 9-15
We used natural abundance stable isotope techniques to estimate carbon and
nitrogen turnover rates in body tissue and mucus of earthworms. Isotope rat
ios of carbon (delta(13)C) and nitrogen (delta(15)N) were monitored simulta
neously in body tissue and mucus for up to 101 days in feeding or fasting L
umbricus festivus kept in an artificial substrate. When the diet of the ear
thworms was switched from clover (C-3 plant, legume) to maize (C-4, non-leg
ume), the new dietary delta(13)C signature manifested itself much more rapi
dly in the mucus than in the body tissue of the animals, causing a delta(13
)C shift of about 4 parts per thousand, in mucus and 1 parts per thousand,
in tissue after 13.5 days. Turnover of earthworm body tissue carbon, unlike
that of mucus carbon, was described adequately by an exponential, single-p
ool model. Nitrogen turnover could not be assessed because the delta(15)N d
ifference between sources was too small. Fasting for 56 days did not result
in the expected whole-body N-15 or C-13 enrichment, but it caused a signif
icant decrease in mucus and tissue C:N ratios and in the ratio (mucus C:N r
atio):(tissue C:N ratio). We conclude that the separate analysis of body ti
ssue and mucus has great potential for studying the ecophysiology, feeding
ecology and role in elemental cycling of earthworms and other invertebrates
.