Free-living parasite infectious stages promote zooplankton abundance under the risk of predation.

Oecologia

Department of Chemistry and Biology, Ryerson University, 350 Victoria Street, Toronto, ON, M5B 2K3, Canada.

Published: October 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Free-living parasite stages like cercariae from trematodes are a significant part of aquatic ecosystems, but their role in predator-prey dynamics is not well understood.
  • Experimental studies showed that the presence of cercariae allowed Daphnia (a type of freshwater zooplankton) to thrive under predation by larval dragonflies, increasing their population by about 50%.
  • This suggests that cercariae may serve as alternative prey, potentially benefiting zooplankton communities, although more research is needed to explore variations with different predators and species involved.

Article Abstract

Free-living parasite infectious stages, such as the cercariae of trematodes (flatworms), can represent substantial biomass in aquatic ecosystems, yet their interactions with other planktonic fauna are poorly understood. Given that cercariae are consumed by various aquatic predators, sometimes even preferentially over zooplankton, their presence may decrease predation pressure on free-living organisms within similar trophic niches by serving as alternate prey. Here, we experimentally examined how the presence of cercariae (Plagiorchis sp.) affected the population dynamics of common freshwater zooplankton (Daphnia sp.) in the presence of a predator (the larval dragonfly, Leucorrhinia intacta) known to consume both. After seeding 48 mesocosms with starting populations of Daphnia, we used four treatments (12 replicates each) representing a factorial combination of the absence/presence of both cercariae and dragonfly larvae and tracked Daphnia populations over 4 weeks. We found a significant interaction between the presence of cercariae and predators on Daphnia population size. When faced with predation pressure, Daphnia reached ~ 50% higher numbers when accompanied by cercariae than without, suggesting a "protective" effect of the latter by acting as substitute prey. Within aquatic ecosystems, an abundance of trematodes may prove advantageous for zooplankton communities that share common predators, but further studies will be needed to determine how this varies depending on the predator, trematode, and zooplankton taxa involved.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-019-04503-zDOI Listing

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