Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA
Abstract
Diets must satisfy the everyday metabolic requirements of organisms and can also serve as medicines to combat disease. Currently, the medicinal role of diets is much better understood in terrestrial than in aquatic ecosystems. This is surprising because phytoplankton species synthesize secondary metabolites with known antimicrobial properties. Here, we investigated the medicinal properties of phytoplankton (including toxin-producing cyanobacteria) against parasites of the dominant freshwater herbivore,
Daphnia.
We fed
Daphnia dentifera
on green algae and toxic cyanobacteria diets known to vary in their nutritional quality and toxin production, and an additional diet of
Microcystis
with added pure microcystin-LR. We then exposed
Daphnia
to fungal and bacterial parasites.
Anabaena
,
Microcystis
and
Chlorella
diets prevented infection of
Daphnia
by the fungal parasite
Metschnikowia
, while
Nodularia
toxins increased offspring production by infected hosts. In contrast to their medicinal effects against
Metschnikowia
, toxic phytoplankton generally decreased the fitness of
Daphnia
infected with the bacterial parasite,
Pasteuria
. We also measured the amount of toxin produced by phytoplankton over time. Concentrations of anatoxin-a produced by
Anabaena
increased in the presence of
Metschnikowia
, suggesting parasite-induced toxin production. Our research illustrates that phytoplankton can serve as toxins or medicines for their consumers, depending upon the identity of their parasites.
Funder
Division of Environmental Biology
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
23 articles.
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