Carbon and nitrogen isotopes of different native fish tissues from the Santa Ana River, California
Brock M. Huntsman, Matthew J. Young, Kai Palenscar, Kurt E. Anderson, William Ota, Jordan M. Buxton, Justin K. Clause, Danielle L. Palm, Jeff L. Gronemyer, Brett Mills, Kerwin Russell, Rebecca Christensen | November 17th, 2026
Stable isotopes are commonly used to understand the role of fishes in aquatic food webs. However, variability in species- and tissue-specific isotopic values can affect the inference that is drawn from a stable isotope study. We evaluated differences in stable isotopes of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) among three tissue types (white muscle, caudal fin rays, and eye lenses) for Santa Ana Sucker Pantosteus santaanae and Arroyo Chub Gila orcuttii to inform the design of a stable isotope study in the Santa Ana River, an urban river that is located in southern California.
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