The influence of toxic and filamentous blue-green algae on feeding and population growth of the rotifer Brachionus rubens

1991 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 2760-2760
Author(s):  
Karl O. Rothhaupt
1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (8) ◽  
pp. 1739-1744 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen T. Threlkeld

The sensitivity of life-table parameters of two cladoceran zooplankton to slight, natural variations in temperature was determined during the onset of a midsummer blue-green algal bloom in a large turbid reservoir (Lake Texoma, Oklahoma, Texas). Prior to the onset of blue-green algae, cohorts of Ceriodaphnia lacustris incubated at ambient epilimnion temperatures (27–30 °C) had higher individual somatic and population growth rates, an earlier age at first reproduction, and shorter life-spans than cohorts incubated at a constant 25 °C. As blue-green algae became abundant, Ceriodaphnia growth rates were reduced more dramatically at ambient temperatures than at 25 °C, suggesting that a temperature–resource interaction was important to determination of somatic growth rate, age of first reproduction, and population growth rate. Ceriodaphnia populations declined in Lake Texoma as blue-green algae became abundant. Diaphanosoma leuchtenbergianum, which was abundant throughout the period of blue-green algal dominance, did not show the temperature–resource interaction found for Ceriodaphnia. Temperature–resource interactions have been hypothesized to determine seasonal change in zooplankton community structure; this study provides experimental evidence of demographic consequences in natural populations of one kind of common temperature–resource interaction.


Author(s):  
L. V. Leak

Electron microscopic observations of freeze-fracture replicas of Anabaena cells obtained by the procedures described by Bullivant and Ames (J. Cell Biol., 1966) indicate that the frozen cells are fractured in many different planes. This fracturing or cleaving along various planes allows one to gain a three dimensional relation of the cellular components as a result of such a manipulation. When replicas that are obtained by the freeze-fracture method are observed in the electron microscope, cross fractures of the cell wall and membranes that comprise the photosynthetic lamellae are apparent as demonstrated in Figures 1 & 2.A large portion of the Anabaena cell is composed of undulating layers of cytoplasm that are bounded by unit membranes that comprise the photosynthetic membranes. The adjoining layers of cytoplasm are closely apposed to each other to form the photosynthetic lamellae. Occassionally the adjacent layers of cytoplasm are separated by an interspace that may vary in widths of up to several 100 mu to form intralamellar vesicles.


2017 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. M. Chung ◽  
S. H. Kim ◽  
Y.T. Oh ◽  
M. Ali ◽  
A. Ahmad

2009 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 860-865
Author(s):  
Lan-Lan LU ◽  
Gen-Bao LI ◽  
Yin-Wu SHEN ◽  
Ming-Ming HU ◽  
Yong-Ding LIU

1995 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 153-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kajino ◽  
K. Sakamoto

Musty odor has occurred annually in Lake Biwa since 1969. Osaka municipal waterworks, which is located downstream of Lake Biwa, has made many efforts to treat musty-odor compounds produced in Lake Biwa from spring through autumn. With the development of analytical methods for the determination of musty-odor compounds, we have been able to confirm that planktonic blue-green algae are the major causes of the musty-odor occurrences. The relationship between the growth of blue-green algae and the water quality was not so apparent. However, through our data analysis focusing on the relationship between musty-odor occurrences due to Phormidium tenue or Oscillatoria tenuis and some nutrients in Lake Biwa, we found that the concentration of nitrate in water may be an important parameter for the estimation of growth of the algae and the musty-odor behavior.


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