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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Nitrogen isotopes in tooth enamel record diet and trophic level enrichment: results from a controlled feeding experiment

Emma R. KastJennifer LeichliterJennifer LeichliterThomas TütkenMarcus ClaussDaniela E. WinklerAlan D. ForemanNicolas N. DupreyHubert B. VonhofAlfredo Martínez-garcíaTina LüdeckeGerald H. HaugDaniel M. Sigman

subject

10253 Department of Small Animals010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLow nitrogen010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesNitrogen isotopes tooth enamel paleodiet trophic level rodentsstomatognathic systemGeochemistry and PetrologyDentinmedicineOrganic matter1907 Geology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTrophic levelchemistry.chemical_classification630 AgricultureGeologyδ15NTooth enamelIsotopes of nitrogenDiagenesisstomatognathic diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryEnvironmental chemistry1906 Geochemistry and Petrology570 Life sciences; biologyGeology

description

Nitrogen isotope ratios (δ15N) are a well-established tool for investigating the dietary and trophic behavior of animals in terrestrial and marine food webs. To date, δ15N values in fossils have primarily been measured in collagen extracted from bone or dentin, which is susceptible to degradation and rarely preserved in deep time (>100,000 years). In contrast, tooth enamel organic matter is protected from diagenetic alteration by the mineral structure of hydroxyapatite and thus is often preserved over geological time. However, due to the low nitrogen content (<0.01 %) of enamel, the measurement of its nitrogen isotopic composition has been prevented by the analytical limitations of traditional methods. Here, we present a novel application of the oxidation-denitrification method that allows measurement of δ15N values in tooth enamel (δ15Nenamel). This method involves the oxidation of nitrogen in enamel-bound organic matter to nitrate followed by bacterial conversion of nitrate to N2O, and requires ≥100 times less nitrogen than traditional approaches. To demonstrate that δ15Nenamel values record diet and trophic behavior, we conducted a controlled feeding experiment with rats and guinea pigs (n = 37). We determined that nitrogen concentration in tooth enamel (x̄ = 5.0 ± 1.0 nmol/mg) is sufficient for δ15Nenamel analyses with ≥5 mg untreated enamel powder. The nitrogen isotope composition of enamel reflects diet with an enrichment (Δ15Nenamel-diet) of ca. 2–4‰. δ15Nenamel values differ significantly between dietary groups and clearly record a shift from pre-experimental to experimental diet. The small sample size required (≤5 mg) by this method permits analyses of sample size-limited, diagenetically robust tooth enamel, and, as such it represents a promising new dietary proxy for reconstructing food webs and investigating the trophic ecology of extant and extinct taxa.

10.5167/uzh-196423https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-196423