The role of ultraviolet radiation in the diel vertical migration of zooplankton: an experimental test of the transparency-regulator hypothesis

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH(2015)

引用 18|浏览6
暂无评分
摘要
Zooplankton diel vertical migration (DVM) is often explained as a balance between predator avoidance and resource acquisition. However, recent studies suggest that ultraviolet radiation (UV) may also be important in driving zooplankton DVM in some systems. Williamson et al. (Williamson et al., 2011) proposed the "transparency-regulator hypothesis," which integrates UV into our current understanding of the drivers of DVM and predicts that the relative roles of UV and visual predation pressure will vary systematically across a gradient of lake transparency. To assess this hypothesis, we conducted in situ mesocosm experiments in five different lakes: two lakes without fish and three lakes with fish that spanned a range of UV and visible light transparency. We used an open-bottomed mesocosm design that allowed for the direct manipulation of UV that did not constrain visual predators or the amplitude or timing of natural migrations. Consistent with the transparency-regulator hypothesis, we found that UV is an important driver of Daphnia DVM in highly UV transparent lakes with and without fish but not in low transparency systems. Our results also suggest that UVand visual predation pressure may interact in systems of intermediate transparency.
更多
查看译文
关键词
ultraviolet radiation,diel vertical migration,zooplankton ecology
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要