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Does excess carbon affect respiration of the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas?

Does excess carbon affect respiration of the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas?
Does excess carbon affect respiration of the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas?
1. Herbivorous zooplankton maintain a rather constant elemental composition in their body mass as compared with the variability commonly encountered in their food. Furthermore, their high phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) content means that they often face an excess of carbon (C) in their diet. Regulation of this surplus of energy may occur via modulation of assimilation efficiency, or postassimilation by increased respiration (CO2) and/or excretion dissolved organic carbon, DOC. Whereas several studies have examined the effect of elemental imbalance in the genus Daphnia, few have examined other zooplankton taxa.
2. We investigated whether the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus uses increased respiration as a means of stoichiometrically regulating excess dietary C. Growth rate and respiration were measured under different food qualities (C : N and C : P ratios).
3. Both C : N and C : P ratios in food had strong effects on growth rate, demonstrating strong nutrient limitation of rotifer growth when nutrient elements were depleted in the diet and indicating the need for stoichiometric regulation of excess ingested C.
4. Respiration measurements, supported by a stoichiometric model, indicated that excess C was not released as CO2 in B. calyciflorus and that nutrient balance must therefore be maintained by other means such as excretion of DOC or egestion in faecal material.
0046-5070
2320-2339
Jensen, T.C.
a005b290-7b2b-4ec3-ac47-f58e7bf9d33d
Anderson, T.R.
dfed062f-e747-48d3-b59e-2f5e57a8571d
Daufresne, M.
3700087e-4338-4d22-b4ba-1e434a2d3052
Hessen, D.O.
57c22fb0-cd1a-49bb-b998-5e653710d748
Jensen, T.C.
a005b290-7b2b-4ec3-ac47-f58e7bf9d33d
Anderson, T.R.
dfed062f-e747-48d3-b59e-2f5e57a8571d
Daufresne, M.
3700087e-4338-4d22-b4ba-1e434a2d3052
Hessen, D.O.
57c22fb0-cd1a-49bb-b998-5e653710d748

Jensen, T.C., Anderson, T.R., Daufresne, M. and Hessen, D.O. (2006) Does excess carbon affect respiration of the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas? Freshwater Biology, 51 (12), 2320-2339. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2427.2006.01653.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

1. Herbivorous zooplankton maintain a rather constant elemental composition in their body mass as compared with the variability commonly encountered in their food. Furthermore, their high phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) content means that they often face an excess of carbon (C) in their diet. Regulation of this surplus of energy may occur via modulation of assimilation efficiency, or postassimilation by increased respiration (CO2) and/or excretion dissolved organic carbon, DOC. Whereas several studies have examined the effect of elemental imbalance in the genus Daphnia, few have examined other zooplankton taxa.
2. We investigated whether the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus uses increased respiration as a means of stoichiometrically regulating excess dietary C. Growth rate and respiration were measured under different food qualities (C : N and C : P ratios).
3. Both C : N and C : P ratios in food had strong effects on growth rate, demonstrating strong nutrient limitation of rotifer growth when nutrient elements were depleted in the diet and indicating the need for stoichiometric regulation of excess ingested C.
4. Respiration measurements, supported by a stoichiometric model, indicated that excess C was not released as CO2 in B. calyciflorus and that nutrient balance must therefore be maintained by other means such as excretion of DOC or egestion in faecal material.

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Published date: 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 44010
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/44010
ISSN: 0046-5070
PURE UUID: cb491b3e-e06b-4b5f-a225-3a6171909abb

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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:59

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Contributors

Author: T.C. Jensen
Author: T.R. Anderson
Author: M. Daufresne
Author: D.O. Hessen

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