2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2016.02.009
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The Multidimensional Nutritional Niche

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Cited by 133 publications
(173 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
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“…Understanding the nutrient requirements and foraging goals of animals is important to predict how animals will respond to environmental changes in prey availability Machovsky-Capuska et al 2016). The challenges faced by foragers in marine environments are particularity complex.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Understanding the nutrient requirements and foraging goals of animals is important to predict how animals will respond to environmental changes in prey availability Machovsky-Capuska et al 2016). The challenges faced by foragers in marine environments are particularity complex.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The possibility of exploiting new food substrates provides the opportunity for species to expand their distribution range and can contribute to diversification. To colonize new foods, animals need to adapt to the nutritional, physical, and chemical properties of the food [2]. Many studies have shown how this adaptation often involves acquiring the ability to exploit foods of differing physical properties or tolerate new, frequently toxic, chemical compositions [3, 4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the fruit fly Drosophila sechellia and tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta have evolved tolerance to toxic compounds of their food plants, Morinda and Nicotiana , respectively [3, 4]. Thus, the range of potential food types a species can exploit will define its ability to expand its nutritional niche [2]. In addition, to expand their nutritional niche species need to adapt to differences in the nutrient content of the new foods [2].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Like traditional traits, isotopic traits can be fit with a convex hull, the size of which has been extensively used as a proxy of the size of the trophic niche occupied by a group of individuals (Layman et al, 2007(Layman et al, , 2012Cucherousset and Villéger, 2015). Similarly, the geometric framework of nutrition (NGF) has been used to build multidimensional models of animal macronutrient budgets (i.e., multidimensional nutritional niche) in which information on food macronutrient contents (i.e., proteins, carbohydrates, lipids), animal macronutrient requirements, and animal nutritional processes such as macronutrient intake, growth and macronutrient use, are integrated, modeled and visualized as three macronutrient axes (Raubenheimer et al, 2015;Machovsky-Capuska et al, 2016. Although this approach has been extremely useful to improve our understanding of the foraging behavior, post-ingestion allocation of macronutrients, and the dietary niche breath of a large diversity of animals, it is a data hungry approach and some of the required nutritional descriptors are restricted to specific taxonomic groups-such as animals but not plants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%