TY - JOUR A1 - Lukas, Marcus A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Acclimation to dietary shifts impacts the carbon budgets of Daphnia magna JF - Journal of plankton research N2 - Daphnia responds to low availability of carbon (food quantity) or limiting concentrations of nutrients relative to carbon (C) in excess (food quality) by respectively saving or discharging C via different pathways. We investigated which kind of food limitation leads to a faster regulation in Daphnia C budgets, and whether the pre-assimilative C pathways, ingestion and faeces egestion and the post-assimilative C pathways, excretion and respiration, are regulated concurrently. Daphnia magna were exposed to dietary shifts in different food quantities or qualities; food quality was varied in terms of the essential component, cholesterol. After acclimation to the new diet ranging from 0 to 96 h, C budgets were measured by a radiotracer technique. Dietary shifts in quantity and quality caused Daphnia to quickly adjust their C budgets within 6 h, but different C pathways were affected. A shift to low food quantity reduced Daphnia respiration indicating C retention. In contrast, sudden low quality food caused increased faeces egestion to discharge excess C. Furthermore, we observed a delayed increase in excretion but no change in respiration within the time frame studied. Such time-shifted responses appear to be an appropriate means to keep the costs of physiological adjustments relatively low, which in turn would benefit Daphnia performance. KW - carbon pathway KW - cholesterol KW - zooplankton KW - food quality KW - food quantity Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbu018 SN - 0142-7873 SN - 1464-3774 VL - 36 IS - 3 SP - 848 EP - 858 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sommer, Ulrich A1 - Adrian, Rita A1 - Domis, Lisette Nicole de Senerpont A1 - Elser, James J. A1 - Gaedke, Ursula A1 - Ibelings, Bas A1 - Jeppesen, Erik A1 - Lurling, Miquel A1 - Molinero, Juan Carlos A1 - Mooij, Wolf M. A1 - van Donk, Ellen A1 - Winder, Monika ED - Futuyma, DJ T1 - Beyond the Plankton Ecology Group (PEG) Model mechanisms driving plankton succession JF - Annual review of ecology, evolution, and systematics JF - Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics N2 - The seasonal succession of plankton is an annually repeated process of community assembly during which all major external factors and internal interactions shaping communities can be studied. A quarter of a century ago, the state of this understanding was described by the verbal plankton ecology group (PEG) model. It emphasized the role of physical factors, grazing and nutrient limitation for phytoplankton, and the role of food limitation and fish predation for zooplankton. Although originally targeted at lake ecosystems, it was also adopted by marine plankton ecologists. Since then, a suite of ecological interactions previously underestimated in importance have become research foci: overwintering of key organisms, the microbial food web, parasitism, and food quality as a limiting factor and an extended role of higher order predators. A review of the impact of these novel interactions on plankton seasonal succession reveals limited effects on gross seasonal biomass patterns, but strong effects on species replacements. KW - lakes KW - oceans KW - seasonal patterns KW - pelagic zone KW - light KW - overwintering KW - grazing KW - parasitism KW - food quality Y1 - 2012 SN - 978-0-8243-1443-9 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110411-160251 SN - 1543-592X VL - 43 IS - 2-4 SP - 429 EP - 448 PB - Annual Reviews CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sperfeld, Erik A1 - Raubenheimer, David A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Bridging factorial and gradient concepts of resource co-limitation: towards a general framework applied to consumers JF - Ecology letters N2 - Organism growth can be limited either by a single resource or by multiple resources simultaneously (co-limitation). Efforts to characterise co-limitation have generated two influential approaches. One approach uses limitation scenarios of factorial growth assays to distinguish specific types of co-limitation; the other uses growth responses spanned over a continuous, multi-dimensional resource space to characterise different types of response surfaces. Both approaches have been useful in investigating particular aspects of co-limitation, but a synthesis is needed to stimulate development of this recent research area. We address this gap by integrating the two approaches, thereby presenting a more general framework of co-limitation. We found that various factorial (co-)limitation scenarios can emerge in different response surface types based on continuous availabilities of essential or substitutable resources. We tested our conceptual co-limitation framework on data sets of published and unpublished studies examining the limitation of two herbivorous consumers in a two-dimensional resource space. The experimental data corroborate the predictions, suggesting a general applicability of our co-limitation framework to generalist consumers and potentially also to other organisms. The presented framework might give insight into mechanisms that underlie co-limitation responses and thus can be a seminal starting point for evaluating co-limitation patterns in experiments and nature. KW - Consumer KW - essential nutrient KW - factorial design KW - food quality KW - growth rate KW - multi-nutrient limitation KW - nutritional ecology KW - performance landscape KW - substitutable resource KW - synergistic effect Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.12554 SN - 1461-023X SN - 1461-0248 VL - 19 SP - 201 EP - 215 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Koussoroplis, Apostolos-Manuel A1 - Schälicke, Svenja A1 - Raatz, Michael A1 - Bach, Moritz A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Feeding in the frequency domain BT - Coarser-grained environments increase consumer sensitivity to resource variability, covariance and phase JF - Ecology letters N2 - Theory predicts that resource variability hinders consumer performance. How this effect depends on the temporal structure of resource fluctuations encountered by individuals remains poorly understood. Combining modelling and growth experiments with Daphnia magna, we decompose the complexity of resource fluctuations and test the effect of resource variance, supply peak timing (i.e. phase) and co-limiting resource covariance along a gradient from high to low frequencies reflecting fine- to coarse-grained environments. Our results show that resource storage can buffer growth at high frequencies, but yields a sensitivity of growth to resource peak timing at lower ones. When two resources covary, negative covariance causes stronger growth depression at low frequencies. However, negative covariance might be beneficial at intermediate frequencies, an effect that can be explained by digestive acclimation. Our study provides a mechanistic basis for understanding how alterations of the environmental grain size affect consumers experiencing variable nutritional quality in nature. KW - Cholesterol KW - covariance KW - Daphnia KW - digestive acclimation KW - dynamic energy budgets KW - food quality KW - phosphorus KW - storage KW - unbalanced diets Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13267 SN - 1461-023X SN - 1461-0248 VL - 22 IS - 7 SP - 1104 EP - 1114 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lukas, Marcus A1 - Sperfeld, Erik A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Growth Rate Hypothesis does not apply across colimiting conditions cholesterol limitation affects phosphorus homoeostasis of an aquatic herbivore JF - Functional ecology : an official journal of the British Ecological Society N2 - 1. Herbivores show stronger control of element homoeostasis than primary producers, which can lead to constraints in carbon and nutrient transfer efficiencies from plants to animals. Insufficient dietary phosphorus (P) availability can cause reduced body P contents along with lower growth rates of animals, leading to a positive relationship between growth and body P. 2. We examined how a second limiting food component in combination with dietary P limitation influences growth and P homoeostasis of a herbivore and how this colimitation influences the hypothesized positive correlation between body P content and growth rates. Therefore, we investigated the responses in somatic growth and P stoichiometry of Daphnia magna raised on a range of diets with different amounts of P and the sterol cholesterol. 3. Somatic growth rates of D. magna increased asymptotically with increasing P as well as with increasing cholesterol availability. The body P content increased with increasing dietary P and stabilized at high dietary P availability. The observed plasticity in D. magna's P stoichiometry became stronger with increasing cholesterol availability, i.e. with decreasing colimitation by cholesterol. 4. At P-limiting conditions, the positive correlation between body P content and growth rate, as predicted by the growth rate hypothesis (GRH) applied to the within-species level, declined with increasing cholesterol limitation and disappeared entirely when cholesterol was not supplied. Thus, even when Daphnia shows no growth response owing to strong limitation by the colimiting nutrient, the body P content may vary substantially, calling into question the unconditional use of herbivores' P content as predictor of a potential P limitation in nature. 5. The observed interaction between dietary P and cholesterol on Daphnia's growth and stoichiometry can be used as a conceptual framework of how colimiting essential nutrients affect herbivore homoeostasis, and provide further insights into the applicability of the GRH within a consumer species. KW - colimitation KW - Daphnia KW - ecological stoichiometry KW - essential resources KW - food quality KW - imbalanced diet KW - nutrient limitation KW - nutritional ecology KW - zooplankton Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2011.01876.x SN - 0269-8463 VL - 25 IS - 6 SP - 1206 EP - 1214 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Malden ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schälicke, Svenja A1 - Heim, Silvia A1 - Martin-Creuzburg, Dominik A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Inter- and intraspecific differences in rotifer fatty acid composition during acclimation to low-quality food JF - Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London : B, Biological sciences N2 - Biochemical food quality constraints affect the performance of consumers and mediate trait variation among and within consumer species. To assess inter- and intraspecific differences in fatty acid retention and conversion in freshwater rotifers, we provided four strains of two closely related rotifer species,Brachionus calyciflorussensustricto andBrachionus fernandoi, with food algae differing in their fatty acid composition. The rotifers grazed for 5 days on eitherNannochloropsis limneticaorMonoraphidium minutum, two food algae with distinct polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) profiles, before the diets were switched to PUFA-freeSynechococcus elongatus, which was provided for three more days. We found between- and within-species differences in rotifer fatty acid compositions on the respective food sources and, in particular, highly specific acclimation reactions to the PUFA-free diet. The different reactions indicate inter- but also intraspecific differences in physiological traits, such as PUFA retention, allocation and bioconversion capacities, within the genusBrachionusthat are most likely accompanied by differences in their nutritional demands. Our data suggest that biochemical food quality constraints act differently on traits of closely related species and of strains of a particular species and thus might be involved in shaping ecological interactions and evolutionary processes. This article is part of the theme issue 'The next horizons for lipids as 'trophic biomarkers': evidence and significance of consumer modification of dietary fatty acids'. KW - Brachionus KW - fatty acids KW - food quality KW - PUFA composition KW - rotifer KW - strains KW - trait variation Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0644 SN - 0962-8436 SN - 1471-2970 VL - 375 IS - 1804 PB - Royal Society CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wacker, Alexander A1 - Marzetz, Vanessa A1 - Spijkerman, Elly T1 - Interspecific competition in phytoplankton drives the availability of essential mineral and biochemical nutrients JF - Ecology : a publication of the Ecological Society of America N2 - The underlying mechanisms and consequences of competition and diversity are central themes in ecology. A higher diversity of primary producers often results in higher resource use efficiency in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. This may result in more food for consumers on one hand, while, on the other hand, it can also result in a decreased food quality for consumers; higher biomass combined with the same availability of the limiting compound directly reduces the dietary proportion of the limiting compound. Here we tested whether and how interspecific competition in phytoplankton communities leads to changes in resource use efficiency and cellular concentrations of nutrients and fatty acids. The measured particulate carbon : phosphorus ratios (C:P) and fatty acid concentrations in the communities were compared to the theoretically expected ratios and concentrations of measurements on simultaneously running monocultures. With interspecific competition, phytoplankton communities had higher concentrations of the monounsaturated fatty acid oleic acid and also much higher concentrations of the ecologically and physiologically relevant long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid eicosapentaenoic acid than expected concentrations based on monocultures. Such higher availability of essential fatty acids may contribute to the positive relationship between phytoplankton diversity and zooplankton growth, and may compensate limitations by mineral nutrients in higher trophic levels. KW - biodiversity KW - C:P ratio KW - competition KW - eicosapentaenoic acid KW - elemental composition KW - EPA KW - food quality KW - minerals KW - phosphorus KW - polyunsaturated fatty acids KW - PUFA KW - resource use efficiency Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1890/14-1915.1 SN - 0012-9658 SN - 1939-9170 VL - 96 IS - 9 SP - 2467 EP - 2477 PB - Wiley CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sperfeld, Erik A1 - Martin-Creuzburg, Dominik A1 - Wacker, Alexander T1 - Multiple resource limitation theory applied to herbivorous consumers Liebig's minimum rule vs. interactive co-limitation JF - Ecology letters N2 - There is growing consensus that the growth of herbivorous consumers is frequently limited by more than one nutrient simultaneously. This understanding, however, is based primarily on theoretical considerations and the applicability of existing concepts of co-limitation has rarely been tested experimentally. Here, we assessed the suitability of two contrasting concepts of resource limitation, i.e. Liebigs minimum rule and the multiple limitation hypothesis, to describe nutrient-dependent growth responses of a freshwater herbivore (Daphnia magna) in a system with two potentially limiting nutrients (cholesterol and eicosapentaenoic acid). The results indicated that these essential nutrients interact, and do not strictly follow Liebigs minimum rule, which consistently overestimates growth at co-limiting conditions and thus is not applicable to describe multiple nutrient limitation of herbivorous consumers. We infer that the outcome of resource-based modelling approaches assessing herbivore population dynamics strongly depends on the applied concept of co-limitation. KW - Cholesterol KW - Daphnia magna KW - eicosapentaenoic acid KW - essential resources KW - food quality KW - herbivore KW - multi-nutrient limitation KW - nutritional ecology KW - von Liebig Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2011.01719.x SN - 1461-023X VL - 15 IS - 2 SP - 142 EP - 150 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Malden ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Denoux, Clemence A1 - Martin-Creuzburg, Dominik A1 - Koussoroplis, Apostolos-Manuel A1 - Perriere, Fanny A1 - Desvillettes, Christian A1 - Bourdier, Gilles A1 - Bec, Alexandre T1 - Phospholipid-bound eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) supports higher fecundity than free EPA in Daphnia magna JF - Journal of plankton research N2 - Nutrition bioassays in which polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA)-deficient diets were supplemented with free long-chain PUFA (>= C20) consistently revealed positive effects on somatic growth and fecundity of Daphnia. However, free PUFA are hardly available in natural diets. In general, PUFA are bound to other lipids, especially to phospholipids and triglycerides. Here, we evaluate the potential of free and phospholipid-bound dietary eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) to support somatic growth and fecundity of Daphnia magna. In a growth experiment, supplementation of a C20 PUFA-deficient diet with free or phospholipid-bound EPA improved somatic growth rates of D. magna equally. However, the increase in fecundity was significantly more pronounced when phospholipid-bound EPA was provided. Free and phospholipid-bound EPA were provided in the same concentrations in our experiment, suggesting that the allocation to reproduction-related processes is affected differently by phospholipid-bound PUFA and free PUFA. Our finding stresses the need to consider the distribution of dietary PUFA in different lipid classes to gain a better understanding of how PUFA influence life history traits of Daphnids in the field. KW - Daphnia magna KW - food quality KW - phospholipids KW - polyunsaturated fatty acids KW - reproduction KW - somatic growth KW - trophic interactions Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbx037 SN - 0142-7873 SN - 1464-3774 VL - 39 SP - 843 EP - 848 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Wacker, Alexander A1 - von Elert, Eric T1 - Polyunsaturated fatty acids : evidence for non-substitutable biochemical resources in Daphnia galeata N2 - The factors that determine the efficiency of energy transfer in aquatic food webs have been investigated for many decades. The plant-animal interface is the most variable and least predictable of all levels in the food web. In order to study determinants of food quality in a large lake and to test the recently proposed central importance of the long-chained eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) at the pelagic producer-grazer interface, we tested the importance of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) at the pelagic producerconsumer interface by correlating sestonic food parameters with somatic growth rates of a clone of Daphnia galeata. Daphnia growth rates were obtained from standardized laboratory experiments spanning one season with Daphnia feeding on natural seston from Lake Constance, a large pre-alpine lake. Somatic growth rates were fitted to sestonic parameters by using a saturation function. A moderate amount of variation was explained when the model included the elemental parameters carbon (r2 = 0.6) and nitrogen (r2 = 0.71). A tighter fit was obtained when sestonic phosphorus was incorporated (r2 = 0.86). The nonlinear regression with EPA was relatively weak (r2 = 0.77), whereas the highest degree of variance was explained by three C18-PUFAs. The best (r2 = 0.95), and only significant, correlation of Daphnia's growth was found with the C18-PUFA α-linolenic acid (α-LA; C18:3n-3). This correlation was weakest in late August when C:P values increased to 300, suggesting that mineral and PUFA-limitation of Daphnia's growth changed seasonally. Sestonic phosphorus and some PUFAs showed not only tight correlations with growth, but also with sestonic α-LA content. We computed Monte Carlo simulations to test whether the observed effects of α-LA on growth could be accounted for by EPA, phosphorus, or one of the two C18-PUFAs, stearidonic acid (C18:4n-3) and linoleic acid (C18:2n-6). With >99 % probability, the correlation of growth with α-LA could not be explained by any of these parameters. In order to test for EPA limitation of Daphnia's growth, in parallel with experiments on pure seston, growth was determined on seston supplemented with chemostat-grown, P-limited Stephanodiscus hantzschii, which is rich in EPA. Although supplementation increased the EPA content 80-800x, no significant changes in the nonlinear regression of the growth rates with α-LA were found, indicating that growth of Daphnia on pure seston was not EPA limited. This indicates that the two fatty acids, EPA and α-LA, were not mutually substitutable biochemical resources and points to different physiological functions of these two PUFAs. These results support the PUFA-limitation hypothesis for sestonic C:P < 300 but are contrary to the hypothesis of a general importance of EPA, since no evidence for EPA limitation was found. It is suggested that the resource ratios of EPA and α-LA rather than the absolute concentrations determine which of the two resources is limiting growth. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - paper 063 KW - alga KW - consumer KW - Daphnia KW - fatty acid KW - food quality KW - grazer KW - herbivore KW - Lake Constance KW - European Alps KW - PUFA KW - seston Y1 - 2001 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-17587 ER -