2008
DOI: 10.1002/iroh.200711013
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Ontogenetic Shifts in the Ability of the Cladoceran, Moina macrocopa Straus and Ceriodaphnia cornuta Sars to Utilize Ciliated Protists as Food Source

Abstract: The ontogenetic diet shifts and age specific ability of the two cladoceran species Moina macrocopa and Ceriodaphnia cornuta to derive energy from ciliated protists have been investigated in laboratory. The postembryonic developmental rates and life table demography (longevity, age and size at first reproduction, fecundity and intrinsic rate of natural increase) of the cladocerans have been elucidated on algae (Chlorella vulgaris) and the ciliated protists (Tetrahymena pyriformis, Colpoda (c.f.) steini) as food… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…We consider that ADBM building of real webs (Petchey et al, 2008) would enable: (i) to detect the relevant intraguild relationships based on body size (Woodward & Hildrew, 2002), (ii) to quantify the omnivore rates of linkage in the web and their strength in each community (Kumar & Hwang, 2008) and (iii) to test the possible role of mixotrophic algae which combines resource use to outcompete specialist (Tittel et al, 2003;Carrillo et al, 2006). At the moment, our study illustrates that local plankton diversity of a given food web is maintained as a result of the broad range of body sizes of both consumer and resource species, which allows a weakly overlap of diet as Hutchinson (1959) guessed and as demonstrated by the fact that this structure is different from those of vertically segregated communities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We consider that ADBM building of real webs (Petchey et al, 2008) would enable: (i) to detect the relevant intraguild relationships based on body size (Woodward & Hildrew, 2002), (ii) to quantify the omnivore rates of linkage in the web and their strength in each community (Kumar & Hwang, 2008) and (iii) to test the possible role of mixotrophic algae which combines resource use to outcompete specialist (Tittel et al, 2003;Carrillo et al, 2006). At the moment, our study illustrates that local plankton diversity of a given food web is maintained as a result of the broad range of body sizes of both consumer and resource species, which allows a weakly overlap of diet as Hutchinson (1959) guessed and as demonstrated by the fact that this structure is different from those of vertically segregated communities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore the size range of 0.7-63 lm agrees with the feeding size range of cladoceran species found in our mesocosms. The cascading effects was more prominent in smaller sizes (<15 lm) because the dominant cladoceran species was Moina macrocopa (Yamazaki et al 2010), which can feed on small cells such as Aerobacter aerogenes (2.5 · 1 lm; Stuart et al 1931), but not effectively on cells in larger fractions such as small-sized ciliates Tetrahymena pyriformis (35 · 18 lm) especially in the earlier growth stage (Kumar and Hwang 2008). Other cladoceran species observed in our mesocosms, Bosmina, Ceriodaphnia, Chydoridae, Scapholeberis, and Macrothrichidae spp., were also shown to feed primarily on small cells (<15 lm; Geller and Mu¨ller 1981; Kawabata and Urabe 1998;Nandini et al 2002).…”
Section: Categoriesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Meanwhile, the decline of Moina may support the latter notion. Moina macrocopa, which lives in Japanese rice fields [20], feeds efficiently on a wide range of sizes of plankton particle, from the bacterium Escherichia coli (2 lm long and 0.5 lm wide) to the ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis (50 lm long and 30 lm wide; [37,38]). As Euglena, Halteria, and Coleps are mainly below 50 lm in cross-sectional diameter [20], Moina seemed to be able to feed on these protozoa.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%