“…Essential fatty acids (EFA), such as the "omega-6" and "omega-3" FA (linoleic acid, arachidonic acid, eicosapentaenoic acid, and docosahexaenoic acid), cannot be directly synthesized by animals and have to be acquired through predation or symbiont transfer; therefore, the δ 13 C-EFA values of the animal will be comparable to that of the symbionts or the external prey, since little or no isotopic fractionation occurs during this process (Treignier, Tolosa, Grover, Reynaud, & Ferrier-Pagès, 2009). In the case of non-essential FAs, which can be synthesized de novo by the animal, the δ 13 C values will reflect the competing processes of assimilation from external food and de novo synthesis (Gladyshev et al, 2012;Villinski, Hayes, Villinski, Brassell, & Raff, 2004). For the de novo synthesis of fatty acids, transferase and desaturase induce a δ 13 C isotope depletion in the synthesized fatty acid, while elongase provide a δ 13 C enrichment in the synthesized fatty acid (Figure 6).…”