Volume 593, Number 1, 103-110, DOI: 10.1007/s10750-007-9051-zOpen Access

Inducible defenses and rotifer food chain dynamics

Irene Van der Stap, Matthijs Vos and Wolf M. Mooij

From the issue entitled "Advances in Rotifer Research, Proceedings of the XIth International Rotifer Symposium, held in Mexico City, Mexico, 11-18 March 2006"

View Related Documents

Abstract

Theoretical studies have predicted that inducible defenses affect food chain dynamics and persistence. Here we review and evaluate laboratory experiments that tested hypotheses developed from these theoretical studies. This review specifically focuses on the effects of inducible defenses in phytoplankton-rotifer food chain dynamics. First, we describe the occurrence of colony formation within different strains of green algae (Scenedesmaceae) in response to infochemicals released during grazing by the herbivorous rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus. Then we examined the effects of inducible defenses on the population dynamics of this planktonic system in which algal strains that differed in their defense strategies were used. Simple food chains were composed of green algae (Scenedesmaceae), herbivorous rotifers (Brachionus calyciflorus) and carnivorous rotifers (Asplanchna brightwellii). In this system B. calyciflorus exhibits an inducible defense against predation by developing long postero-lateral spines. Experimental studies showed that inducible defenses, as opposed to their absence, could prevent high-amplitude population fluctuations. We discuss the dual effects of induced defenses on extinction probabilities and consider the fit of a theoretical model to experimental data to understand the mechanisms that underlie the observed dynamics.

Keywords   Asplanchna  -  Brachionus  - Food web - Infochemicals - Kairomones - Phenotypic plasticity - Predator–prey interactions -  Scenedesmus

Guest editors: S. S. S. Sarma, R. D. Gulati, R. L. Wallace, S. Nandini, H. J. Dumont & R. Rico-Martínez
Advances in Rotifer Research

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document