Differential impacts of copepods and cladocerans on lake seston and resulting effects on zooplankton growth

Title
Differential impacts of copepods and cladocerans on lake seston and resulting effects on zooplankton growth

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2004

Authors

Becker C, Feuchtmayr H, Brepohl D, Santer B, Boersma M

Journal
Hydrobiologia

Volume
526

Pagination
197-207

ISBN Number

Keywords

Daphnia, Copepod, stoichiometry, homeostasis, feeding, growth, PUFA, mesocosm, Schosee, Germany, 1.6 m3, freshwater

Abstract

In an enclosure study in Scho¨ hsee, a small mesotrophic lake in Northern Germany, the impact of copepodsand daphniids on the seston community was studied. In general, these two guilds differ in their feedingbehaviour. Copepods actively select their food, with a preference for larger particles, whereas most cladoceransare unselective filter-feeders. In this study we investigate how the impact of the two differentgrazers affects zooplankton growth. We combine results obtained in the laboratory with results measured insitu in the enclosures. Copepods and cladocerans were cultured on seston from enclosures that wereinhabited by density gradients of copepods or daphniids. We observed that Daphnia grew faster on sestonthat was pre-handled by copepods than on seston that was pre-handled by daphniids, and that somaticgrowth decreased with increasing densities of daphniids in the enclosures. In contrast, we observed nodifferences in development rates for copepods grown on the different media. The population growth rates ofDaphnia in the Daphnia treatments were determined in the enclosures. Growth differences in both somaticandpopulation growth of Daphnia were correlated to food quality aspects of the seston. In the laboratorywe found that Daphnia growth was correlated with several fatty acids. The strongest regression was with theconcentration of 20:4×3 (r2 ¼ 0.37). This particular fatty acid also showed the highest correlation withgrowth after normalisation of the fatty acids to the carbon content of the enclosures (r2 ¼ 0.33). On theother hand, in the enclosure the population growth correlated most to the particulate nitrogen content(r2 ¼ 0.78) and only to the N:C ratio, when normalised to carbon (r2 ¼ 0.51).

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Effect of N:P ratios on response of Mediterranean picophytoplankton to experimental nutrient inputs

Title
Effect of N:P ratios on response of Mediterranean picophytoplankton to experimental nutrient inputs
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Agawin NSR, Duarte CM, Agusti S, Vaque D

Journal
Aquatic Microbial Ecology
Volume
34
Pagination
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Keywords

Picophytoplankton, N:P ratios, Mediterranean Sea, Nutrient, mesocosm, Bay of Blanes, Spain, 16 m3

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Colony growth and evidence for colony multiplication in Phaeocystis pouchetii (Prymnesiophyceae) isolated from mesocosm blooms

Title
Colony growth and evidence for colony multiplication in Phaeocystis pouchetii (Prymnesiophyceae) isolated from mesocosm blooms
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Whipple SJ, Patten BC, Verity PG

Journal
Journal of Plankton Research
Volume
24
Pagination
495-501
ISBN Number
Keywords

Phaeocystis pouchetii, Bloom, colony division, mesocosm, 11 m3, Bergen, Norway, Espegrend

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Astaxanthin production in marine pelagic copepods grazing on two different phytoplankton diets

Title
Astaxanthin production in marine pelagic copepods grazing on two different phytoplankton diets
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Van-Nieuwerburgh L, Wanstrand I, Liu J, Snoeijs P

Journal
Journal of Sea Research
Volume
53
Pagination
147-160
ISBN Number
Keywords

Food web, Copepod diet, carotenoids, Antioxidant, eutrophication, mesocosm, Trondheim, Norway, 2 m3

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Daily bacterioplankton dynamics in a sub-Saharan estuary (Senegal River, West Africa): a mesocosm study

Title
Daily bacterioplankton dynamics in a sub-Saharan estuary (Senegal River, West Africa): a mesocosm study
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Troussellier M, Got P, Mboup M, Corbin D, Guiliano L, Cappelo S, Bouvy M

Journal
Aquatic Microbial Ecology
Volume
40
Pagination
13-24
ISBN Number
Keywords

Bacteria, Heterotrophic nanoflagellates, mesocosm, 3 m3, Growth and grazing rates, Senegal estuary, West Africa, freshwater

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Use of non-limiting substrates to increase size; a generic strategy to simultaneously optimize uptake and minimize predation in pelagic osmotrophs?

Title
Use of non-limiting substrates to increase size; a generic strategy to simultaneously optimize uptake and minimize predation in pelagic osmotrophs?

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2005

Authors

Thingstad TF, Ovreas L, Egge JK, Lovdal T, Heldal M

Journal
Ecology Letters

Volume
8

Pagination
675-682

ISBN Number

Keywords

Biogeochemistry, cell size, food webs, life strategies, trophic niches, mesocosm, metadata

Abstract

Coexistence of two organisms competing for the same nutrient is possible if one is an uptake , and the other a predation defence specialist. In pelagic food webs this principlehas been linked to cell size. Small osmotroph cells, with their high surface : volume ratio,have been argued to be uptake specialists, while larger osmotrophs avoiding the intensegrazing pressure from small protozoan predators might represent predation defence specialists. This may seem like an obligatory trade-off situation that necessitates a choiceof either being small or being large, and thus being potentially dominant in oligotrophicor in eutrophic environments, respectively. However, in a more precise form, the theoryfor nutrient diffusion states that it is the surface : cell requirement of limiting element ratio, rather than the surface : volume ratio, that is important. The distinction is crucial,since it opens up the possibility of there being life strategies that use a non-limitingelement to increase size. Hypothesized to maximize uptake and predator defencesimultaneously, such strategies should be particularly successful. We suggest that thisstrategy is exploited by osmotrophs with different size and physiology, such asheterotrophic bacteria, unicellular cyanobacteria and diatoms. Since the strategy implies ashift in organism stoichiometry, the biogeochemical implications are strong, illustratingthe tight relationships between physical micro-scale processes, organism life strategies,biodiversity, food web structure, and biogeochemistry.

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Effects of sediment and nutrient enrichment on water quality in the Archipelago Sea, northern Baltic: An enclosure experiment in shallow water

Title
Effects of sediment and nutrient enrichment on water quality in the Archipelago Sea, northern Baltic: An enclosure experiment in shallow water
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Suomela J, Gran V, Helminen H, Lagus A, Lehtoranta J, Sipura J

Journal
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science
Volume
65
Pagination
337-350
ISBN Number
Keywords

sediment, benthic fluxes, nitrogen, phosphorus, eutrophication, mesocosm, 30-40 m3, Archipelago Sea, Finland

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Tracing the production and degradation of autochthonous fractions of dissolved organic matter by fluorescence analysis

Title
Tracing the production and degradation of autochthonous fractions of dissolved organic matter by fluorescence analysis
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Stedmon CA, Markager S

Journal
Limnology & Oceanography
Volume
50
Pagination
1415-1426
ISBN Number
Keywords

DOM, Dynamics, autocthonous, nutrient addition, humic fractions, mesocosm, phytoplankton, Bacteria, 11 m3, Espegrend, Bergen, Norway

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Copepod and microzooplankton grazing in mesocosms fertilised with different Si:N ratios: no overlap between food spectra and Si: N influence on zooplankrton trophic level

Title
Copepod and microzooplankton grazing in mesocosms fertilised with different Si:N ratios: no overlap between food spectra and Si: N influence on zooplankrton trophic level
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Sommer U, Hansen T, Blum O, Holzner N, Vadstein O, Stibor H

Journal
Oecologia
Volume
142
Pagination
274-283
ISBN Number
Keywords

Nutrient ratios, Trophic level, grazing, microzooplankton, mesozooplankton, mesocosm, 5.5 m3, Hopavag, Trondheim, Norway

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Linking foraging strategies of marine calanoid copepods to patterns of nitrogen stable isotope signatures in a mesocosm study

Title
Linking foraging strategies of marine calanoid copepods to patterns of nitrogen stable isotope signatures in a mesocosm study
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Authors

Sommer F, Saage A, Santer B, Hansen T, Sommer U

Journal
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Volume
286
Pagination
99-106
ISBN Number
Keywords

nitrogen, isotopes, Trophic enrichment, food webs, Foraging strategy, copepods, mesocosm, Zooplankton, Trondheim fjord, Norway, 1.5 m3

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