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Beyond monoculture stoichiometry studies: assessing growth, respiration, and feeding responses of three Daphniaspecies to P-enriched, low C:P lake seston

Authors :
Currier, Courtney M.
Elser, James J.
Source :
Inland Waters; July 2017, Vol. 7 Issue: 3 p348-357, 10p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

AbstractNumerous studies in ecological stoichiometry have assessed responses of Daphniato single- and multi-species food resources of varying nutritional quality. Diets based on P-limited algae with a high biomass carbon to phosphorus (C:P) ratio impose decreased growth on Daphniabecause P demands for growth are not met. More recently, laboratory studies have shown that P-rich algal food also results in decreased growth rates for Daphnia; however, no published study has tested the impact of low food C:P on Daphniaunder field conditions. To address this, we measured growth rate as well as respiration and ingestion rates for D. magna, D. pulicaria, and D. pulexthat were fed lake seston experimentally enriched with phosphate (PO43−). Lake seston during the experimental period successfully took up PO43−enrichment treatments and was dominated by cyanobacteria and haptophytes, primarily those from the genus Prymnesium. Growth rate reductions for D. magnawere strong in response to high-P food, most likely as a result of decreased ingestion rate; however, growth rate responses for D. pulexand D. pulicariawere modest and not statistically significant, although significant responses in respiration rates were observed for all species. Our study extends laboratory findings that P-rich food can have deleterious impacts on Daphniato field conditions. We also found diverse responses among species, however, possibly caused by variations among taxa in body stoichiometry or physiology, differences in ambient and treatment seston C:P for the various experiments, or the effects of diet diversity under high-P conditions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20442041 and 2044205X
Volume :
7
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Inland Waters
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs44933902
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/20442041.2017.1319180