The edibility of Staurastrum chaetoceras and Cosmarium abbreviatum (desmidiaceae) for Daphnia galeata/hyalina and the role of desmids in the aquatic food web |
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Authors: | Peter FM Coesel |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Aquatic Ecology, University of Amsterdam, Kruislaan 320, 1098 SM Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | A laboratory clone of Daphnia galeata/hyalina was fed with two different planktic desmid taxa: Staurastrum chaetoceras and Cosmarium abbreviatum var. planctonicum, being about equal in cell size. Whereas Staurastrum chaetoceras was readily ingested and assimilated to a high degree, Cosmarium was hardly incorporated. This could be partly due to the presence of an extracellular mucilaginous envelope in the latter species. When decapsulated by mild sonification, Cosmarium cells were significantly better ingested but digestion was still inferior to that of Staurastrum, presumably because of the more compact cell shape of Cosmarium.From literature it appears that small-sized planktic desmid species occasionally may constitute a main food source for zooplankton, especially in eutrophic lakes. Most likely however, desmids, particularly large-sized species, play a much more important role in the food chain in the benthic compartment of shallow, oligotrophic water bodies where they serve as a food source for various macro-invertebrate taxa. |
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Keywords: | phytoplankton green algae extracellular mucous envelope grazing zooplankton |
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