Life history synchronization in a long-lifespan single-cohort Daphnia population in a fishless alpine lake

Citation
Zm. Gliwicz et al., Life history synchronization in a long-lifespan single-cohort Daphnia population in a fishless alpine lake, OECOLOGIA, 128(3), 2001, pp. 368-378
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
OECOLOGIA
ISSN journal
00298549 → ACNP
Volume
128
Issue
3
Year of publication
2001
Pages
368 - 378
Database
ISI
SICI code
0029-8549(200108)128:3<368:LHSIAL>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
One-year data on Daphnia and other zooplankton taxa from two neighboring ul tra-oligotrophic alpine lakes in the Tatra Mountains, southern Poland, reve aled a multi-specific herbivore community of small-bodied cladocerans and r otifers in the lake that has contained fish for millennia, and the large-bo died Daphnia pulicaria as the sole herbivore species monopolizing resources in the absence of fish in the other lake, which has never been successfull y stocked. D. pulicaria co-exists with an abundant Cyclops population. In c ontrast to the non-abundant small-bodied D. longispina, which reproduces ye ar-round in the lake with fish, D. pulicaria in the fishless lake was found to reproduce only once a year over a short period of time, suggesting stro ng stabilizing selection for the precise timing of reproductive effort and hatching from diapausing eggs in the clones inhabiting the lake. This is co nceivably due to the exceptionally long lifespan of Daphnia, which can over -winter either in ephippia or in the form of active adults that have restra ined from reproduction until the next year, when, almost I year old, they p roduce eggs. The new-year generation starts from both the ephippial eggs an d eggs released by the over-wintering, adults. Only a small fraction of the population is recruited as the second new-year generation from eggs releas ed by a few new-generation females that succeed in growing and maturing ear ly. In each of the two generations, reproductive effort is restricted to a short period, evidently the only time window when (1) food levels are high enough to allow juvenile growth and (2) predation by Cyclops is low enough for high survival of eggs and neonates. No immediately hatching eggs are pr oduced outside this reproductive window, even when the body lipids of the a dult Daphnia are as high as at the time of summer reproduction, suggesting a deliberate halt to reproduction and its postponement until the following summer.