Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments

The performance of zooplankton has a major impact on the efficiency in trophic transfer in pelagic food webs and is therefore examined in this study. I investigated the effect of different food quantity and food quality, as measured by omega-3 fatty acid (ω3-FA) content on survival, somatic growth a...

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Autor principal: Pree, Bernadette
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment 2011
Materias:
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author Pree, Bernadette
author_browse Pree, Bernadette
author_facet Pree, Bernadette
author_sort Pree, Bernadette
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The performance of zooplankton has a major impact on the efficiency in trophic transfer in pelagic food webs and is therefore examined in this study. I investigated the effect of different food quantity and food quality, as measured by omega-3 fatty acid (ω3-FA) content on survival, somatic growth and reproduction of Daphnia magna at high and low temperatures in laboratory growth experiments. I first investigated the response across a range from low to high food quantity (0.02, 0.07, 0.2, 0.7, 2.0 mg C l-1) of the green alga Scenedesmus acutus at 12.0˚C and 20.6°C. Food quantity constraints on somatic growth of Daphnia and increasing growth rate were found with increasing food concentration. An interaction between quantity and temperature showed a higher maximal growth at higher temperature and high food levels. Furthermore, the starvation point shifted to a lower food concentration at low temperatures. Subsequently I tested the response in survival, somatic and reproductive growth of D. magna to different quality of food in terms of FA content, temperature and food quantity. It was a 2x2x3 factorial design performed at two food levels (maximum growth at 2.0 mg C l-1 and close to the reproduction threshold concentration at 0.2 mg C l-1) and two temperatures (14.1˚C and 21.7°C). To address the question if 3-FA enrichment enhances fitness of D. magna, algal food suspensions were amended with eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) or oleic acid (non-essential control treatment). The results show, besides the expected effects of food quantity and the interaction of temperature and food quantity, a significant effect of EPA enrichment on somatic growth rate and reproduction. EPA amendment improved somatic growth and egg production at both temperatures. The strongest effect of EPA enrichment was manifested on somatic and reproductive growth at low temperature and at high food concentration (2.0 mg C l-1). These results indicate that food quality is of greater ecological importance in cold freshwater systems, like at high latitudes and high altitudes. In temperate lakes, the effect of interaction between food quantity, quality and temperature is manifested in the seasonal as well as the vertical variation of these factors. When EPA content is high in surface waters of stratified lakes and zooplankton migrates vertically during night to colder deeper layers during night the combined effect of FA content and temperature can be expected to result in improved somatic growth.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2011
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spelling RepoSLU31522012-10-08T07:06:53Z Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments Pree, Bernadette Daphnia magna temperature Scenedesmus acutus food quality dietary fatty acid amendment food concentration pelagic food web The performance of zooplankton has a major impact on the efficiency in trophic transfer in pelagic food webs and is therefore examined in this study. I investigated the effect of different food quantity and food quality, as measured by omega-3 fatty acid (ω3-FA) content on survival, somatic growth and reproduction of Daphnia magna at high and low temperatures in laboratory growth experiments. I first investigated the response across a range from low to high food quantity (0.02, 0.07, 0.2, 0.7, 2.0 mg C l-1) of the green alga Scenedesmus acutus at 12.0˚C and 20.6°C. Food quantity constraints on somatic growth of Daphnia and increasing growth rate were found with increasing food concentration. An interaction between quantity and temperature showed a higher maximal growth at higher temperature and high food levels. Furthermore, the starvation point shifted to a lower food concentration at low temperatures. Subsequently I tested the response in survival, somatic and reproductive growth of D. magna to different quality of food in terms of FA content, temperature and food quantity. It was a 2x2x3 factorial design performed at two food levels (maximum growth at 2.0 mg C l-1 and close to the reproduction threshold concentration at 0.2 mg C l-1) and two temperatures (14.1˚C and 21.7°C). To address the question if 3-FA enrichment enhances fitness of D. magna, algal food suspensions were amended with eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) or oleic acid (non-essential control treatment). The results show, besides the expected effects of food quantity and the interaction of temperature and food quantity, a significant effect of EPA enrichment on somatic growth rate and reproduction. EPA amendment improved somatic growth and egg production at both temperatures. The strongest effect of EPA enrichment was manifested on somatic and reproductive growth at low temperature and at high food concentration (2.0 mg C l-1). These results indicate that food quality is of greater ecological importance in cold freshwater systems, like at high latitudes and high altitudes. In temperate lakes, the effect of interaction between food quantity, quality and temperature is manifested in the seasonal as well as the vertical variation of these factors. When EPA content is high in surface waters of stratified lakes and zooplankton migrates vertically during night to colder deeper layers during night the combined effect of FA content and temperature can be expected to result in improved somatic growth. SLU/Dept. of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment 2011 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3152/
spellingShingle Daphnia magna
temperature
Scenedesmus acutus
food quality
dietary fatty acid amendment
food concentration
pelagic food web
Pree, Bernadette
Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments
title Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments
title_full Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments
title_fullStr Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments
title_full_unstemmed Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments
title_short Effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of Daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with Scenedesmus acutus and EPA amendments
title_sort effects of food quantity, dietary fatty acids and temperature on fitness of daphnia magna : a factorial experiment with scenedesmus acutus and epa amendments
topic Daphnia magna
temperature
Scenedesmus acutus
food quality
dietary fatty acid amendment
food concentration
pelagic food web