Analysis of carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes has allowed freshwater ecologists to examine lake food webs in increasing detail. Many such studies have highlighted the existence of separate within-lake pelagic and benthic-littoral food webs but are typically conducted on large (> 10km(2)) lakes, whereas the majority of lakes are actually relatively small. We used stable isotope analysis (delta C-13 & delta N-15) to examine trophic interactions between fish and their prey in Plu beta see, as an example of a small, stratifying lake, and to determine whether separate pelagic/benthic-littoral food webs could be distinguished in such systems. Our results indicate that the Plu beta see food web was complicated, and due to extensive intra-annual isotopic variation in zooplankton (e. g. cladoceran delta C-13 annual range = 25.6%), it may be impossible to definitively assign consumers from small, eutrophic stratified lakes to pelagic or benthic-littoral food webs. We present evidence that some components of the Plu beta see food web (large bream) may be subsidised by carbon of methanogenic origin.