4.4 Article

Demographic consequences of mitigating strategies in planktonic invertebrates facing global browning of freshwater ecosystem

Journal

AQUATIC SCIENCES
Volume 83, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00027-021-00787-7

Keywords

Dissolved organic matter; Reproduction; Trade-offs; Population; Community; Stability

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Recent research suggests that freshwater browning has a weak impact on planktonic invertebrate abundances, as different species employ varying strategies in response. While individual and population-level responses fluctuate, the community as a whole demonstrates resilience and temporal stability across different concentrations of terrestrial dissolved organic matter. Mitigating strategies performed at the individual level may mask the effects of browning on population and community dynamics.
Recently, it has been reported that freshwater browning has less effect on planktonic invertebrate abundances than would be expected from current knowledge regarding of the biochemical activity of dissolved organic matter. It may be that the weak responses of whole communities to browning are masked because the individual mitigating strategies of community components have disparate demographic consequences. To examine the above hypothesis, individual-, population- and community-level responses of freshwater invertebrates to varying concentrations of terrestrial dissolved organic matter (tDOM) were investigated. Common cladocerans of the Chydoridae family, Chydorus sphaericus and Acroperus harpae, were used in the experiment which revealed that species employed different strategies to cope with tDOM. C. sphaericus maintained high production of asexual offspring at the cost of individual body growth, so any decreases in the population sizes were not observed. A. harpae, conversely, invested mainly in the production of resting eggs and increased survivability, which resulted in smaller populations. Invertebrate communities showed similar resilience and temporal stability across tDOM concentrations. Therefore, the influence of tDOM was apparently negligible at community level, since the effects of the mitigating strategies of the two species complemented one another. This experiment showed that symptoms of freshwater browning might be difficult to observe at population and community level due to effective mitigating strategies performed at the level of individuals. The effects of browning on freshwater invertebrates might be better considered in the context of alterations in the demographic rates together constituting life-cycle strategies to maintain species survival.

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