The neonate nutrition hypothesis: early feeding affects the body stoichiometry ofDaphniaoffspring
Author:
Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Ecosystem Modelling; Institute of Biochemistry and Biology; University of Potsdam; Potsdam; Germany
2. Department of Biology; Trent University; Peterborough; ON; Canada
Publisher
Wiley
Subject
Aquatic Science
Link
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/wol1/doi/10.1111/fwb.12213/fullpdf
Reference51 articles.
1. Biological stoichiometry of Daphnia growth: an ecophysiological test of the growth rate hypothesis;Acharya;Limnology & Oceanography,2004
2. Phytoplankton patchiness in Winam Gulf, Lake Victoria: a study using principal component analysis of in situ fluorescent excitation spectra;Alexander;Freshwater Biology,2013
3. Threshold elemental ratios for carbon versus phosphorus limitation in Daphnia;Anderson;Freshwater Biology,2005
4. Ingestion, assimilation, survival, and reproduction by Daphnia pulex fed seven species of blue-green algae;Arnold;Limnology and Oceanography,1971
5. Differential effects of phosphorus and fatty acids on Daphnia magna growth and reproduction;Becker;Limnology and Oceanography,2005
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1. Proteome changes in an aquatic invertebrate consumer in response to different nutritional stressors;Oecologia;2022-06
2. Direct and Indirect Effects of Resource P-Limitation Differentially Impact Population Growth, Life History and Body Elemental Composition of a Zooplankton Consumer;Frontiers in Microbiology;2018-02-09
3. Does the Growth Rate Hypothesis Apply across Temperatures? Variation in the Growth Rate and Body Phosphorus of Neotropical Benthic Grazers;Frontiers in Environmental Science;2017-04-18
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