scholarly journals Cladocera resting egg banks in temporary and permanent wetlands

Author(s):  
Eliana A. Panarelli ◽  
Daryl Nielsen ◽  
Aleicia Holland

Cladocerans are important filter-feeders transferring energy up the food web to different invertebrate and vertebrate predators. Along the flood period, cladocerans are one of the primary food sources for juvenile fish in floodplain. Resting egg banks allow cladoceran populations to overcome the environmental stress, related to several limnological changes, including complete drying of temporary wetlands. After drought, resting egg banks influence cladoceran community attributes during the cyclic and successional processes driven by episodic flood events. In this study we compared the taxonomic richness of active (from the water column) and dormant (from the sediment) Cladocera assemblages and analyzed the structure of resting egg banks, comparing the diversity, abundance and apparent viability/unviability of the eggs, between six temporary and six permanent wetlands, located along the Ovens River Floodplain, Victoria, Australia. The qualitative analysis shows higher taxonomic richness in active assemblages from temporary (24 taxa) than permanent (13 taxa) wetlands compared to dormant assemblages present in resting egg banks (9 taxa) from temporary and permanent wetlands. However, richness was influenced by taxonomic level of identification, with the majority of resting eggs only being identified to the taxonomic level of family (i.e. Chydoridae). Total taxa richness within egg banks was similar between wetland types, however, on average higher Shannon’s diversity of resting eggs was found within permanent (1.53) than temporary (0.82) wetlands. This is likely to be due to more stable wetlands not providing appropriate cues to trigger dormancy induction or breakage for specific populations, leading to higher values of evenness in permanent than temporary wetlands. Comparing permanent and temporary wetlands, higher abundance of resting eggs (more than four times) consisting of higher abundance of unviable eggs and similar viable egg abundance to permanent wetlands, was found within temporary wetlands, suggesting that the increased resting egg abundance in temporary wetlands is balanced by the losses due to factors such as predation, parasitism or other physical damage, during the terrestrial phase. Despite resistant outer shell structure, this study highlights that the damage to egg integrity is intensified in wetlands that undergo dry phases. Cladoceran resting egg banks represent the potential assemblage to recover after disturbance events such as drying, and information about these is important to ensure appropriate management and conservation of floodplain biodiversity.

2013 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 235-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciana Rabelo Araújo ◽  
Paloma Marinho Lopes ◽  
Jayme Magalhães Santangelo ◽  
Ana Cristina Petry ◽  
Reinaldo Luiz Bozelli

2021 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 26
Author(s):  
Jonathan Rosa ◽  
Ramiro de Campos ◽  
Koen Martens ◽  
Janet Higuti

Ostracods are microcrustaceans that produce resting eggs under adverse conditions. In this study we evaluated the spatial variation of ostracod resting eggs in different regions of temporary lakes in a Brazilian flood plain. Based on the homogenisation effect of flood pulses on aquatic communities in flood plains, we hypothesised that the composition and abundance of ostracod eggs in the centre of temporary lakes would be similar to those in edge regions. Samples were collected from the centre and edge regions of five temporary lakes. Sediment was oven dried, rehydrated and hatching was monitored in germinating chambers. Twelve ostracod species hatched from the egg banks during our experiments. The abundance and species composition were similar between the two regions of the lakes. Flood events may be responsible for the homogenisation of the egg banks as a result of the connection of lakes with principal river channels. During flooding, water masses powerfully enter lakes and can redistribute sediments. This study shows that egg banks have the potential to contribute to the maintenance of local biodiversity and the resilience of biodiversity of temporary lake ecosystems.


2008 ◽  
Vol 65 (8) ◽  
pp. 1692-1704 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meghan Elizabeth Brown

Bythotrephes longimanus (Onychopoda: Cercopagidae), an invasive zooplankter in North America, requires suitable habitat to satisfy its planktonic and resting stages, which occupy the pelagia and sediment of lakes, respectively. Thousands of resting eggs from hundreds of planktonic mothers were exposed to laboratory conditions that mimicked gradients observed in lake sediment (dissolved oxygen = 1.4–11.9 mg·L–1; pH = 3–11). Eggs hatched in all treatments, which confirms the utility of dormancy and the robustness of the resting egg in B. longimanus. However, hatching success and neonate condition were greatest when dormancy conditions were maintained at near-saturated dissolved oxygen and near-neutral pH; deviations from these conditions resulted in prolonged development, smaller neonates, and the failure of many eggs to hatch. In addition to the influence of environmental conditions, heavier mothers produced larger eggs that hatched more frequently and resulted in heavier neonates. These maternal effects are likely due to greater energy investment by healthier mothers. This study suggests that nature and nurture influence dormancy success, and the results underscore that both life-cycle stages of B. longimanus need to be considered to understand its range expansion.


Hydrobiologia ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 526 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markéta Faustová ◽  
Adam Petrusek ◽  
Martin Černý

2019 ◽  
Vol 193 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciana Pena Mello Brandão ◽  
Marina Isabela Bessa Silva ◽  
Déborah Oliveira ◽  
Diego Pujoni ◽  
Thécia Alfenas Paes ◽  
...  

Aiming to evaluate the importance of egg banks from a tropical lake for the active Daphnia laevis dynamics, we investigated ephippia down to a 28-cm sediment depth, and used data obtained by traps to compare with the in situ production and hatching rates of fresh ephippia. All the ephippia from the sediment were opened for inspection of the presence of resting eggs, and those found were incubated to verify hatching. Ephippia density degradation rate was tested by putting isolated ephippia immersed in the sediment lake for 75 days, and found to exponentially decrease with increasing sediment depth. Higher densities were recorded in 2017 (maximum of 1.43 ephippia per cm2) than in 2016 (maximum of 0.8 ephippia per cm2). The empty ephippia rates were high in all sediment depths ranging from 83% to 100%. In contrast, the hatching rates in situ of fresh ephippia were high, suggesting that those that sink are mostly unviable or empty, forming an unusual egg bank in the sediment. In the laboratory, ephippia degradation signs were observed as early as the fifteenth day after contact with sediment. We conclude that the egg bank is not able to support an active population since most of the ephippia are empty and also rapidly degrade in sediment. Our results contribute to the current understanding of diapause in tropical cladocerans, demonstrating that the presence of Daphnia ephippia in the sediment of permanent lakes do not always correspond to an egg bank for temporal dispersion.


2011 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olivier Glippa ◽  
Sami Souissi ◽  
Lionel Denis ◽  
Sandric Lesourd

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