Differing Daphnia magna assimilation efficiencies for terrestrial, bacterial, and algal carbon and fatty acids
Abstract
There is considerable interest in the pathways by which carbon and growthlimiting
elemental and biochemical nutrients are supplied to upper trophic levels. Fatty acids
and sterols are among the most important molecules transferred across the plant–animal
interface of food webs. In lake ecosystems, in addition to phytoplankton, bacteria and
terrestrial organic matter are potential trophic resources for zooplankton, especially in those
receiving high terrestrial organic matter inputs. We therefore tested carbon, nitrogen, and
fatty acid assimilation by the crustacean Daphnia magna when consuming these resources.
We fed Daphnia with monospecific diets of high-quality (Cryptomonas marssonii) and
intermediate-quality (Chlamydomonas sp. and Scenedesmus gracilis) phytoplankton species,
two heterotrophic bacterial strains, and particles from the globally dispersed riparian grass,
Phragmites australis, representing terrestrial particulate organic carbon (t-POC). We also
fed Daphnia with various mixed diets, and compared Daphnia fatty acid, carbon, and
nitrogen assimilation across treatments. Our results suggest that bacteria were nutritionally
inadequate diets because they lacked sterols and polyunsaturated omega-3 and omega-6 (x-3
and x-6) fatty acids (PUFAs). However, Daphnia were able to effectively use carbon and
nitrogen from Actinobacteria, if their basal needs for essential fatty acids and sterols were
met by phytoplankton. In contrast to bacteria, t-POC contained sterols and x-6 and x-3
fatty acids, but only at 22%, 1.4%, and 0.2% of phytoplankton levels, respectively, which
indicated that t-POC food quality was especially restricted with regard to x-3 PUFAs. Our
results also showed higher assimilation of carbon than fatty acids from t-POC and bacteria
into Daphnia, based on stable-isotope and fatty acids analysis, respectively. A relatively high
(.20%) assimilation of carbon and fatty acids from t-POC was observed only when the
proportion of t-POC was .60%, but due to low PUFA to carbon ratio, these conditions
yielded poor Daphnia growth. Because of lower assimilation for carbon, nitrogen, and fatty
acids from t-POC relative to diets of bacteria mixed with phytoplankton, we conclude that
the microbial food web, supported by phytoplankton, and not direct t-POC consumption,
may support zooplankton production. Our results suggest that terrestrial particulate organic
carbon poorly supports upper trophic levels of the lakes.
Main Authors
Format
Articles
Research article
Published
2014
Series
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Original source
http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/13-0650.1
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201405311885Use this for linking
Review status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0012-9658
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1890/13-0650.1
Language
English
Published in
Ecology
Citation
- Taipale, S., Brett, M. T., Hahn, M. W., Martin-Creuzburg, D., Yeung, S., Hiltunen, M., Strandberg, U., & Kankaala, P. (2014). Differing Daphnia magna assimilation efficiencies for terrestrial, bacterial, and algal carbon and fatty acids. Ecology, 95(2), 563-576. https://doi.org/10.1890/13-0650.1
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Copyright© Ecological Society of America. Published in this repository with the kind permission of the publisher.