Food Thresholds in Daphnia Species in the Absence and Presence of Blue‐Green Filaments
- 1 April 1990
- Vol. 71 (2) , 691-702
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1940323
Abstract
Three Daphnia species of different body sizes were grown on a single food resource in steady—state conditions. They differed in food threshold concentrations necessary for body growth and reproduction. The largest species, D. pulicaria, had the lowest thresholds and the smallest, D. cucullata, had the highest thresholds, while D. hyalina was intermediate. This implies competitive superiority of the largest species and inferiority of the smallest one. The sequence, however, was reversed in the presence of blue—green algal filaments, when the thresholds became lowest for D. cucullata and highest for D. pulicaria. Thus the inhibitory effect of filaments is body—size dependent. High densities of filaments that mechanically interfere in food collection may cause shifts in competitive ability among congeneric cladocerans. This may be the reason why, in Europe, D. pulicaria is most successful in ultraoligotrophic lakes while D. cucullata is most successful in eutrophic lakes.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: