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1. Poikilothermic animals incorporate more polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) into their cellular membranes as temperature declines, suggesting an increased sensitivity to PUFA limitation in cool conditions. To test this we raised Daphnia magna at different temperatures and investigated the effect of varying dietary PUFA on life history parameters (i.e. growth, reproduction) and the PUFA composition of body tissue and eggs.
2. Upon a PUFA-rich diet (Cryptomonas sp.) females showed higher concentrations of several omega 3 PUFAs in their body tissue at 15 degrees C than at 20 degrees C and 25 degrees C, indicating a greater structural requirement for omega 3 PUFAs at low temperature. Their eggs had an equal but higher concentration of omega 3 PUFAs than their body tissue.
3. In a life history experiment at 15 and 20 degrees C we supplemented a diet of a PUFA-free cyanobacterium with the omega 3 PUFA eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). The growth of D. magna was more strongly EPA limited at low temperature. A greater requirement for structural EPA at 15 degrees C was indicated by a steeper increase in somatic EPA content with dietary EPA compared to 20 degrees C.
4. At 20 degrees C the development of eggs to successful hatching was high when EPA was supplied to the mothers. At 15 degrees C the hatching success was generally poor, despite of a higher maternal provision of EPA to eggs, compared to that at 20 degrees C, suggesting that EPA alone was insufficient for proper neonatal development at the low temperature. The growth of offspring from mothers raised at 20 degrees C without EPA supplementation was very low, indicating that the negative effects of EPA deficiency can be carried on to the next generation.
5. The fatty acid composition of Daphnia sp. in published field studies shows increasing proportions of saturated fatty acids with increasing environmental temperature, whereas omega 3 PUFAs and EPA show no clear pattern, suggesting that variations in dietary PUFA may mask temperature-dependent adjustments in omega 3 PUFA concentrations of cladocerans in nature.
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.