Search results for "Rotifer"

showing 10 items of 82 documents

Modes, mechanisms and evidence of bet hedging in rotifer diapause traits

2016

In this contribution, we review our knowledge on bet-hedging strategies associated with rotifer diapause. First, we describe the ecological scenario under which bet hedging is likely to have evolved in three diapause-related traits in monogonont rotifer populations: (1) the timing of sex (because diapausing eggs are produced via sexual reproduction), (2) the sexual reproduction ratio (i.e. the fraction of sexually reproducing females) and (3) the timing of diapausing egg hatching. Then, we describe how to discriminate among bet-hedging modes and discuss which modes and mechanisms better fit the variability observed in these traits in rotifers. Finally, we evaluate the strength of the empiri…

0106 biological sciencesbiologyHatchingEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEcologia animalRotiferAquatic ScienceDiapausebiology.organism_classificationRotífers010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSexual reproductionAquatic environmentZoologiaReproductionmedia_common
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Effects of the filter-feeding benthic bivalve corbicula fluminea on plankton community and water quality in aquatic ecosystems: A mesocosm study

2021

The influence of filter-feeding bivalves on plankton communities, nutrients, and water quality in a given aquatic ecosystem is so profound that they can be considered ecosystem engineers. In a 70-day mesocosm experiment, we tested the hypothesis that Corbicula fluminea would change plankton community structure by reducing small zooplankton and large phytoplankton and improve water quality by reducing nutrients. We monitored levels of nitrogen and phosphorus, organic suspended solids (OSS), and light at the sediment surface. Within the plankton, phytoplankton biomass (as Chl a, &gt

0106 biological scienceschlorophyll <i>a</i>Chlorophyll aGeography Planning and DevelopmentCladoceransAquatic ecosystem<i>Corbicula fluminea</i>010501 environmental sciencesAquatic Science01 natural sciencesBiochemistryZooplanktonMesocosmCorbicula flumineaNanophytoplanktonRotifersPhytoplanktonCorbicula flumineaTD201-5000105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and TechnologyWater supply for domestic and industrial purposesbiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyAquatic ecosystemfungiHydraulic engineeringPlanktonbiology.organism_classificationWater qualityEnvironmental chemistryPhytoplanktonSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataEnvironmental scienceTC1-978Eutrophication
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Phylogeny of Syndermata (syn. Rotifera): Mitochondrial gene order verifies epizoic Seisonidea as sister to endoparasitic Acanthocephala within monoph…

2015

Abstract A monophyletic origin of endoparasitic thorny-headed worms (Acanthocephala) and wheel-animals (Rotifera) is widely accepted. However, the phylogeny inside the clade, be it called Syndermata or Rotifera, has lacked validation by mitochondrial (mt) data. Herein, we present the first mt genome of the key taxon Seison and report conflicting results of phylogenetic analyses: while mt sequence-based topologies showed monophyletic Lemniscea (Bdelloidea + Acanthocephala), gene order analyses supported monophyly of Pararotatoria (Seisonidea + Acanthocephala) and Hemirotifera (Bdelloidea + Pararotatoria). Sequence-based analyses obviously suffered from substitution saturation, compositional …

0301 basic medicineGeneticsLife Cycle StagesMitochondrial DNAPhylogenetic treeRotiferaBiologybiology.organism_classificationGenomeAcanthocephala03 medical and health sciencesMonophylyGenes Mitochondrial030104 developmental biologyTaxonPhylogeneticsGene OrderGenome MitochondrialGeneticsAnimalsCladeAcanthocephalaMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Genomic signatures of local adaptation to the degree of environmental predictability in rotifers

2018

AbstractEnvironmental fluctuations are ubiquitous and thus essential for the study of adaptation. Despite this, genome evolution in response to environmental fluctuations —and more specifically to the degree of environmental predictability– is still unknown. Saline lakes in the Mediterranean region are remarkably diverse in their ecological conditions, which can lead to divergent local adaptation patterns in the inhabiting aquatic organisms. The facultatively sexual rotifer Brachionus plicatilis shows diverging local adaptation in its life-history traits in relation to estimated environmental predictability in its habitats. Here, we used an integrative approach —combining environmental, phe…

0301 basic medicineGenome evolutionGenotypeAcclimatizationRotiferalcsh:MedicineSingle-nucleotide polymorphismEnvironmentBiologyBalancing selectionPolymorphism Single NucleotideGenomeArticle03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsSelection GeneticPredictabilitylcsh:ScienceEcosystemSelection (genetic algorithm)Local adaptationGenomeMultidisciplinaryMediterranean Regionlcsh:RGenomicsAdaptation Physiological030104 developmental biologySpainEvolutionary biologylcsh:QAdaptationScientific Reports
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Trematode cercariae as prey for zooplankton: effect on fitness traits of predators.

2019

AbstractRemoval of parasite free-living stages by predators has previously been suggested an important factor controlling parasite transmission in aquatic habitats. Experimental studies of zooplankton predation on macroparasite larvae are, however, scarce. We tested whether trematode cercariae, which are often numerous in shallow waters, are suitable prey for syntopic zooplankters. Feeding rates and survival of freshwater cyclopoids (Megacyclops viridis, Macrocyclops distinctus), calanoids (Arctodiaptomus paulseni), cladocerans (Sida crystallina) and rotifers Asplanchna spp., fed with cercariae of Diplostomum pseudospathaceum, a common fish trematode, were studied. In additional long-term e…

0301 basic medicinecopepodsSnailsRotiferareproduktioPredation0302 clinical medicineeye flukerataseläimetloisetCercariaTrophic levelLarvafood webbiologyparasite transmissionplanktonvesiekosysteemit030108 mycology & parasitologyFood webDiplostomumInfectious DiseaseshankajalkaisetTrematodaArctodiaptomusFood Chain030231 tropical medicineCladoceransZoologyZooplanktonZooplanktonfreshwater ecosystemrotifersCopepodatoukat03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsAnalysis of VarianceimumadotAquatic animalbiology.organism_classificationmortalityPredatory Behaviorvesikirputta1181MacroparasiteAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyravintoverkotParasitology
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Impact of biotic interactions on the survival of emerging pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii in aquatic media

2019

Abstract Acinetobacter baumannii is an opportunistic pathogen causing infections in immunocompromised patients. Recent studies recorded its persistence in a variety of abiotic conditions, but data regarding the biotic interactions with other microorganisms are limited. The aim was to assess the interaction of clinically relevant A. baumannii with common faecal bacteria Escherichia coli and Enterococcus faecium. Additionally, the interaction with a bdelloid rotifer Adineta vaga as a potential agent for biological control of A. baumannii was examined. Experiments were conducted in nutrient-poor spring water (SW) and nutrient-rich diluted nutrient broth (DNB) at 22 °C. A. baumannii coexisted w…

Acinetobacter baumanniiEnvironmental Engineeringmedicine.drug_classMicroorganismAntibioticsRotiferHuman pathogenMicrobial Sensitivity TestsWastewatermedicine.disease_causeMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesmedicineEscherichia coliHumansEscherichia coliAcinetobacter baumannii ; bacteria ; inter-bacterial interaction ; rotifers030304 developmental biologyWater Science and Technology0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologybiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationbacterial infections and mycoses6. Clean waterAcinetobacter baumanniiAnti-Bacterial AgentsbacteriaBacteriaEnterococcus faecium
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Transcriptome data reveal syndermatan relationships and suggest the evolution of endoparasitism in acanthocephala via an epizoic stage

2014

The taxon Syndermata comprises the biologically interesting wheel animals ("Rotifera": Bdelloidea + Monogononta + Seisonidea) and thorny-headed worms (Acanthocephala), and is central for testing superordinate phylogenetic hypotheses (Platyzoa, Gnathifera) in the metazoan tree of life. Recent analyses of syndermatan phylogeny suggested paraphyly of Eurotatoria (free-living bdelloids and monogononts) with respect to endoparasitic acanthocephalans. Data of epizoic seisonids, however, were absent, which may have affected the branching order within the syndermatan clade. Moreover, the position of Seisonidea within Syndermata should help in understanding the evolution of acanthocephalan endoparas…

Animal EvolutionScienceMolecular Sequence DataRotiferaAnimal PhylogeneticsTranscriptomesAcanthocephala570 Life sciencesGenome Analysis Toolsddc:570GeneticsAnimalsEvolutionary SystematicsParasitesBiologyPhylogenyTaxonomyEvolutionary BiologyLife Cycle StagesQRComputational BiologyGenomicsBiological EvolutionOrganismal EvolutionPhylogeneticsAnimal TaxonomyMedicineTranscriptomeAnimal GeneticsZoologyResearch Article570 Biowissenschaften
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Nitrate uptake rates in freshwater plankton: the effect of food web structure

2008

9 pages, 3 figure, 1 table

CladoceransAquatic ScienceOceanographyZooplanktonCopepodschemistry.chemical_compoundAlgaeNitrateRotifersPhytoplanktonRuidera Lakes National ParkEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcologybiologyEcology15NNitrogen isotopesfungiBiogeochemistryPlanktonbiology.organism_classificationFood webCell sizechemistryMicrocosmFreshwater plankton
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Planktonic rotifer feeding in hypertrophic conditions

2014

We studied the role of rotifers as grazers in hypertrophic waters, dominated by poorly edible filamentous and colonial cyanobacteria. Population growth of Anuraeopsis fissa and Brachionus angularis, from hypertrophic lake Albufera in Valencia, was followed for 15 days in three treatments of different food size fractions: (a) 0–15 µm (lake water filtered through 15 µm nytal sieve), (b) 0–3 µm (15 µm lake water filtrate filtered through 3 µm nuclepore filter), and (c) 3–15 µm (re-suspension, in absolute filtered lake water, of the seston collected on the 3 µm filter, after passing lake water previously filtered through 15 µm). None of the species grew when fed the food size fraction of 3–15 µ…

CyanobacteriaBotanySestonIngestionRotiferFraction (chemistry)Growth rateBacterioplanktonAquatic ScienceBiologyPlanktonbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternational Review of Hydrobiology
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Density-dependent regulation of natural and laboratory rotifer populations

2001

Density-dependent regulation of abundance is fundamentally important in the dynamics of most animal populations. Density effects, however, have rarely been quantified in natural populations, so population models typically have a large uncertainty in their predictions. We used models generated from time series analysis to explore the form and strength of density-dependence in several natural rotifer populations. Population growth rate (r) decreased linearly or non-linearly with increased population density, depending on the rotifer species. Density effects in natural populations reduced r to 0 at densities of 1–101−1 for 8 of the 9 rotifer species investigated. The sensitivities of these spe…

Density dependenceBrachionus rotundiformisPopulation modelDensity dependentAbundance (ecology)EcologyAutotoxicityRotiferBiologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation density
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