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Journal article

Escape from UV threats in zooplankton: a cocktail of behavior and protective pigmentation

In Ecology 2007, Volume 88, Issue 8, pp. 1932-1939
From

Institute of Ecology/Limnology, Lund University, Lund SE-223 62 Sweden. Lars-Anders.Hansson@limnol.lu.se1

In order to avoid environmental threats, organisms may respond by altering behavior or phenotype. Using experiments performed in high-latitude Siberia and in temperate Sweden, we show for the first time that, among freshwater crustacean zooplankton, the defense against threats from ultraviolet radiation (UV) is a system where phenotypic plasticity and behavioral escape mechanisms function as complementary traits.

Freshwater copepods relied mainly on accumulating protective pigments when exposed to UV radiation, but Daphnia showed strong behavioral responses. Pigment levels for both Daphnia and copepods were generally higher at higher latitudes, mirroring different UV threat levels. When released from the UV threat, Daphnia rapidly reduced (within 10 days) their UV protecting pigmentation-by as much as 40%--suggesting a cost in maintaining UV protective pigmentation.

The evolutionary advantage of protective pigments is, likely, the ability to utilize the whole water column during daytime; conversely, since the amount of algal food is generally higher in surface waters, unpigmented individuals are restricted to a less preferred feeding habitat in deeper waters. Our main conclusion is that different zooplankton taxa, and similar taxa at different latitudes, use different mixes of behavior and pigments to respond to UV radiation.

Language: English
Publisher: Ecological Society of America
Year: 2007
Pages: 1932-1939
ISSN: 19399170 and 00129658
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1890/06-2038.1

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