Distribution and UV protection strategies of zooplankton in clear and glacier-fed alpine lakes

被引:0
|
作者
Barbara Tartarotti
Florian Trattner
Daniel Remias
Nadine Saul
Christian E. W. Steinberg
Ruben Sommaruga
机构
[1] University of Innsbruck,Lake and Glacier Research Group, Institute of Ecology
[2] University of Innsbruck,Institute of Botany
[3] Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin,Laboratory of Freshwater and Stress Ecology, Department of Biology
[4] University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria,Institute of Biology
[5] Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Zooplankton, a group of aquatic animals important as trophic link in the food web, are exposed to high levels of UV radiation (UVR) in clear alpine lakes, while in turbid glacier-fed lakes they are more protected. To study the interplay between behavioral and physiological protection responses in zooplankton from those lakes, we sampled six lakes of different UVR transparency and glacial turbidity. Copepods were absent in the upper water layers of the clearest lake, while in glacier-fed lakes they were more evenly distributed in the water column. Across all lakes, the weighted copepod mean depth was strongly related to food resources (chlorophyll a and rotifers), whereas in the fishless lakes, glacial turbidity largely explained the vertical daytime distribution of these organisms. Up to ~11-times (mean 3.5) higher concentrations of photo-protective compounds (mycosporine-like amino acids, MAAs) were found in the copepods from the clear than from the glacier-fed lakes. In contrast to carotenoid concentrations and antioxidant capacities, MAA levels were strongly related to the lake transparency. Copepods from alpine lakes rely on a combination of behavioral and physiological strategies adapted to the change in environmental conditions taking place when lakes shift from glacially turbid to clear conditions, as glacier retreat proceeds.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] Distribution and UV protection strategies of zooplankton in clear and glacier-fed alpine lakes
    Tartarotti, Barbara
    Trattner, Florian
    Remias, Daniel
    Saul, Nadine
    Steinberg, Christian E. W.
    Sommaruga, Ruben
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [2] Alpine glacier-fed turbid lakes are discontinuous cold polymictic rather than dimictic
    Peter, Hannes
    Sommaruga, Ruben
    [J]. INLAND WATERS, 2017, 7 (01) : 45 - 54
  • [3] Carbon emissions from emerging glacier-fed Himalayan lakes
    Shukla, Tanuj
    Sen, Indra S.
    Sundriyal, Shipika
    [J]. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 2023, 225
  • [4] Are viruses important in the plankton of highly turbid glacier-fed lakes?
    Fabian Drewes
    Hannes Peter
    Ruben Sommaruga
    [J]. Scientific Reports, 6
  • [5] Are viruses important in the plankton of highly turbid glacier-fed lakes?
    Drewes, Fabian
    Peter, Hannes
    Sommaruga, Ruben
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
  • [6] Heat exchange processes and thermal dynamics of a glacier-fed alpine stream
    Khamis, K.
    Brown, L. E.
    Milner, A. M.
    Hannah, D. M.
    [J]. HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2015, 29 (15) : 3306 - 3317
  • [7] Comparison of Hydrological Patterns between Glacier-Fed and Non-Glacier-Fed Lakes on the Southeastern Tibetan Plateau
    Sun, Fangdi
    He, Bin
    Liu, Caixia
    Zeng, Yuchao
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (20)
  • [8] INTERPRETATION OF LAMINATED SEDIMENTS FROM GLACIER-FED LAKES, NORTHWEST SPITSBERGEN
    CROMACK, M
    [J]. NORSK GEOLOGISK TIDSSKRIFT, 1991, 71 (03): : 129 - 132
  • [9] Physico-chemistry and aquatic insects of a glacier-fed and a spring-fed alpine stream
    Füreder, L
    Schütz, C
    Wallinger, M
    Burger, R
    [J]. FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2001, 46 (12) : 1673 - 1690
  • [10] Difference and cause analysis of water storage changes for glacier-fed and non-glacier-fed lakes on the Tibetan Plateau
    Qiao, Baojin
    Zhu, Liping
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 693