• No results found

Morphological Antipredator Adaptations in Water Fleas Hans Lord

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Morphological Antipredator Adaptations in Water Fleas Hans Lord"

Copied!
2
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

Morphological Antipredator Adaptations in Water Fleas Hans Lord

Department of Zoology Animal Ecology Box 463, SE-405 03 Gothenburg

Sweden

The oral defence of this thesis will take place at 10 am on Friday 6th of November 2009, at the Department of Zoology, Medicinaregatan 18, Göteborg.

The opponent is Professor Petter Larsson from the Department of Biology, University of Bergen, Norway.

(2)

Abstract

Some Bosmina and Daphnia species have the ability to develop extreme morphological antipredator defences, such as long antennules, high carapaces and helmets. The relative sizes of these plastic traits may differ substantially between populations, and also between

individuals within a population, between sexes and during ontogeny. In this thesis I examine how abiotic factors (trophic levels and temperature) and biotic factors (fish and invertebrate predators) affect the size and shape of these traits.

In the first two studies, calculations based on experimental results using physical morphological models sinking in glycerine, were used to estimate body drag and energy consumption in Bosmina. Eubosmina longispina, with a low carapace and short antennules, and Eubosmina coregoni gibbera, with a very high carapace and long antennules, were examined. At 5C, E. c. gibbera had 32-45 % higher body drag than E. longispina. At 20C the difference was 20-45 %. A model of swimming predicted that, all else being equal, this difference should result in 18-20 % (at 5C) or 14-16 % (at 20C) lower swimming speed for E. c. gibbera than for E. longispina. This indicates substantial hydrodynamic costs of the morphological antipredator defences, particularly in low temperatures.

The morphological antipredator defences in E. c. gibbera are larger and more variable in females than in males. Male models had lower body drag than models of asexual and sexual females, suggesting that males can swim 14-28 % faster with the same energy

consumption. High speed video documentation of swimming E. c. gibbera showed that males advanced 55-73 % further than females in each swimming stroke. Hydrodynamic body drag may therefore have significant implications for swimming and evolution of sexual

dimorphism in water fleas. Males may lack the defensive, but hydrodynamically expensive, high carapace of female E. c. gibbera probably because competition over mates favours low body drag.

The morphology and size of heads and trunks in Daphnia cristata individuals were studied in twenty lakes in the same drainage basin. The lakes showed a variation in lake total phosphorus and in densities of invertebrate predators and fish. In the end of the summer D. cristata had varying shape and size of their heads. Our results indicate that D. cristata, in nutrient rich lakes, show adaptive morphological defences against both visually hunting and size limited predators.

Female D. cristata head shape, in the examined lakes, varied from small and rounded to large and curved. A significant positive correlation between lake total phosphorus and the allometric head coefficients was found, suggesting that the most extremely shaped heads are found in nutrient-rich lakes.

Keywords: Body drag, Reynolds number, viscosity, zooplankton, Bosmina, swimming velocity, cyclomorphosis, sexual dimorphism.

Daphnia cristata, head area, helmet angle, trophic condition, allometry, invertebrate predator, fish.

References

Related documents

Figure 5.12: Shows the measured and modelled rolling resistance moment against load for the cold B-class tyre. 5.2

Conclusion: Our study stresses the significance of staff involving the patient and family mem- bers in the advance care planning process in nursing homes, thereby adapting the care

We start by giving some key results for the basic multivariate count data AR(1) model, before introducing spatial effects and exogenous variables in this setup.. , y Mt ) 0

The first paper, A design process for complex mechanical structures using Property Based Models, with application to car bodies, is the backbone of this thesis and describes the

High curvature lipids have been shown to completely arrest exocytosis, 40 alter the kinetics and efficiency of release 41-43 and to influence the dimensions of the initial

This feature is used to show that changing the lipid composition of the cell membrane can alter the fraction of neurotransmitter released per event. In paper IV the influence

Ovanstående analys ger vid handen att Norge i tidsperioden före Rysslands agerande i Georgien år 2008 bedöms ha svag politisk vilja, svag militär kapacitet

The differences and exact value changes for the first re-simulation are presented in table 37 below. Whereas the second re-simulation incorporated all of the presented changes as