“…N, P, K, Na) are in short supply (Joern, Provin, & Behmer, 2012; Kaspari & Powers, 2016) or when toxic elements bioaccumulate (Cui, Zhang, Zhang, Liu, & Zhang, 2011; Ouédraogo, Chételat, & Amyot, 2015). The role of sodium in shaping trophic pyramids is relatively unique among the elements in that sodium is an essential element for all animals but is generally not limiting for plants, unlike many other nutrients that are often limiting, such as N, P, and K in terrestrial systems (Kaspari, Welti, & de Beurs, 2020). The amount of sodium found in plant tissue is highly variable (Borer et al., 2019; Han, Fang, Reich, Ian Woodward, & Wang, 2011), resulting in spatial variation in sodium limitation for primary consumers (Prather et al., 2018; Seastedt & Crossley, 1981; Snell‐Rood, Espeset, Boser, White, & Smykalski, 2014; Welti, Sanders, Beurs, & Kaspari, 2019), with expected consequences for higher trophic levels that have yet to be explored.…”