Article (Scientific journals)
How Daphnia copes with excess carbon in its food
Darchambeau, François; Faerovig, P. J.; Hessen, D. O.
2003In Oecologia, 136 (3), p. 336-346
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
 

Files


Full Text
Darchambeau et al. (2003)_Oecologia.pdf
Publisher postprint (285.43 kB)
Download

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Abstract :
[en] Animals that maintain near homeostatic elemental ratios may get rid of excess ingested elements from their food in different ways. C regulation was studied in juveniles of Daphnia magna feeding on two Selenastrum capricornutum cultures contrasting in P content (400 and 80 C:P atomic ratios). Both cultures were labelled with C-14 in order to measure Daphnia ingestion and assimilation rates. No significant difference in ingestion rates was observed between P-low and P-rich food, whereas the net assimilation of C-14 was higher in the treatment with P-rich algae. Some Daphnia were also homogeneously labelled over 5 days on radioactive algae to estimate respiration rates and excretion rates of dissolved organic C (DOC). The respiration rate for Daphnia fed with high C:P algae (38.7% of body C day(-1)) was significantly higher than for those feeding on low C:P algae (25.3% of body C day(-1)). The DOC excretion rate was also higher when animals were fed on P-low algae (13.4% of body C day(-1)) than on P-rich algae (5.7% of body C day(-1)) . When corrected for respiratory losses, total assimilation of C did not differ significantly between treatments (around 60% of body C day(-1)). Judging from these experiments, D. magna can maintain its stoichiometric balance when feeding on unbalanced diets (high C:P) primarily by disposing of excess dietary C via respiration and excretion of DOC.
Disciplines :
Aquatic sciences & oceanology
Author, co-author :
Darchambeau, François ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophys., géophysique et océanographie (AGO) > Océanographie chimique
Faerovig, P. J.
Hessen, D. O.
Language :
English
Title :
How Daphnia copes with excess carbon in its food
Publication date :
2003
Journal title :
Oecologia
ISSN :
0029-8549
eISSN :
1432-1939
Publisher :
Springer Science & Business Media B.V., New York, United States - New York
Volume :
136
Issue :
3
Pages :
336-346
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 16 June 2010

Statistics


Number of views
56 (0 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
446 (1 by ULiège)

Scopus citations®
 
136
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
121
OpenCitations
 
119

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi