1. Environmental conditions as proximate cues of predation risk inducing defensive response in Daphnia pulex
- Author
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Antonio Suppa, Valeria Rossi, Gessica Gorbi, Sara Caleffi, Silvia Marková, and Petr Kotlík
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Abiotic component ,Phenotypic plasticity ,Zoology ,Cell Biology ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Daphnia pulex ,Predation ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Pulex ,Kairomone ,Chaoborus flavicans ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Adaptation ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Daphnia pulex from a pond in Northern Italy shows four distinct defensive morphotypes, varying in the number, location and thickness of neckteeth, as the results of phenotypic plasticity. Because the frequency of the morphotypes was not related to the density of Chaoborus flavicans larvae, the main predators of D. pulex, it has been suggested that environmental factors such as long-day photoperiod, temperature or crowding might act as proximate cues for the predation risk. Here, we analysed the morphotypes of newborn D. pulex produced by mothers not exposed to chemical cues (kairomones) released by Chaoborus, but reared under environmental conditions simulating seasonal differences in predation risk. Three experimental treatments, low temperature and short-day photoperiod (16 °C 12:12 L:D), high temperature and long-day photoperiod (20 °C 14:10 L:D), and crowding under high temperature and long-day photoperiod, were compared for three clonal lineages. Almost 70% of neonates produced one or more neckteeth, but the frequencies of different morphotypes varied significantly among clones and treatments, indicating that both abiotic (temperature and photoperiod) and biotic (crowding) environmental factors affected the development of neckteeth. A characteristic S-shaped relationship between percentages of neckteethed and total juveniles per female further suggests an antipredator adaptation to high prey density. Our findings support that environmental conditions serve as proximate cues of predation risk in D. pulex contributing to the phenotypic plasticity of the neckteeth number.
- Published
- 2020
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