Felicity Victoria Crotty
Plymouth University
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Featured researches published by Felicity Victoria Crotty.
Ecology and Evolution | 2014
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Rod P. Blackshaw; Sina Adl; Richard Inger; Philip J. Murray
Understanding trophic linkages within the soil food web (SFW) is hampered by its opacity, diversity, and limited niche adaptation. We need to expand our insight between the feeding guilds of fauna and not just count biodiversity. The soil fauna drive nutrient cycling and play a pivotal, but little understood role within both the carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycles that may be ecosystem dependent. Here, we define the structure of the SFW in two habitats (grassland and woodland) on the same soil type and test the hypothesis that land management would alter the SFW in these habitats. To do this, we census the community structure and use stable isotope analysis to establish the pathway of C and N through each trophic level within the ecosystems. Stable isotope ratios of C and N from all invertebrates were used as a proxy for trophic niche, and community-wide metrics were obtained. Our empirically derived C/N ratios differed from those previously reported, diverging from model predictions of global C and N cycling, which was unexpected. An assessment of the relative response of the different functional groups to the change from agricultural grassland to woodland was performed. This showed that abundance of herbivores, microbivores, and micropredators were stimulated, while omnivores and macropredators were inhibited in the grassland. Differences between stable isotope ratios and community-wide metrics, highlighted habitats with similar taxa had different SFWs, using different basal resources, either driven by root or litter derived resources. Overall, we conclude that plant type can act as a top-down driver of community functioning and that differing land management can impact on the whole SFW.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2011
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Rod P. Blackshaw; Philip J. Murray
Many studies utilise enrichment of stable isotopes as tracers to follow the interactions occurring within soil food webs and methods have been developed to enrich bacteria, soil fauna and plant litter, Here for the first time we attempt to enrich a soil fungus to 99 atom% with (13)C and (15)N stable isotopes. In this study our objectives were to (a) assess whether the saprotrophic zygomycete fungus Absidia cylindrospora could grow on a medium enriched to 99 atom% with (13)C-glucose and (15)N-ammonium chloride, (b) to determine the level of enrichment obtained, and (c) to examine the change in growth rate of this fungus while it was growing on the dually enriched medium. To achieve this, the fungus was grown on agar enriched with (13)C and (15)N to 99 atom% and its growth rate monitored. The results showed that A. cylindrospora would grow on the highly labelled growth medium, but that its rate of growth was affected compared with the rate on either natural abundance media or media highly enriched with a single isotope ((13)C or (15)N). The implications of these results is that although the fungus is able to utilise these heavier isotopes, the biochemical processes involved in growth are affected, and consideration should be given to these differences when using stable isotope tracers in, for example, soil food web studies.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2011
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Rod P. Blackshaw; Phillip J. Murray
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2009
Philip J. Murray; C. D. Clegg; Felicity Victoria Crotty; Noelia de la Fuente Martinez; Jennifer K. Williams; Rod P. Blackshaw
Archive | 2012
Phil J. Murray; Felicity Victoria Crotty; Nick Van Eekeren
Archive | 2012
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Sina M. Adl; Rod P. Blackshaw; Phil J. Murray
Archive | 2012
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Sina M. Adl
Archive | 2011
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Sina M. Adl; Rod P. Blackshaw; Philip J. Murray
Archive | 2011
Felicity Victoria Crotty; Sina M. Adl; Rod P. Blackshaw; Phil J. Murray
Archive | 2010
Felicity Victoria Crotty; C. D. Clegg; Rod P. Blackshaw; Philip J. Murray