Chytrids alleviate the harmful effect of heat and cyanobacteria diet on Daphnia via PUFA-upgrading

Author:

Abonyi András12,Pilecky Matthias13,Rasconi Serena14,Ptacnik Robert1,Kainz Martin J13

Affiliation:

1. WasserCluster Lunz – Biologische Station GmbH , Dr. Carl Kupelwieser Promenade 5, A-3293 Lunz am See , Austria

2. Institute of Aquatic Ecology, Centre for Ecological Research , Karolina út 29, H-1113 Budapest , Hungary

3. Donau-Universität Krems , Dr. Karl Dorrek Straße 30, A-3500 Krems , Austria

4. Université Savoie Mont Blanc, INRAE, UMR CARRTEL , 75 bis avenue de Corzent, Thonon les Bains cedex F-74200 , France

Abstract

Abstract Chytrid fungal parasites increase herbivory and dietary access to essential molecules, such as polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), at the phytoplankton–zooplankton interface. Warming enhances cyanobacteria blooms and decreases algae-derived PUFA for zooplankton. Whether chytrids could support zooplankton with PUFA under global warming scenarios remains unknown. We tested the combined effect of water temperature (ambient: 18°C, heat: +6°C) and the presence of chytrids with Daphnia magna as the consumer, and Planktothrix rubescens as the main diet. We hypothesized that chytrids would support Daphnia fitness with PUFA, irrespective of water temperature. Heating was detrimental to the fitness of Daphnia when feeding solely on the Planktothrix diet. Chytrid-infected Planktothrix diet alleviated the negative impact of heat and could support Daphnia survival, somatic growth and reproduction. Carbon stable isotopes of fatty acids highlighted a ~3x more efficient n-3 than n-6 PUFA conversion by Daphnia feeding on the chytrid-infected diet, irrespective of temperature. The chytrid diet significantly increased eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA; 20:5n-3) and arachidonic acid (ARA; 20:4n-6) retention in Daphnia. The EPA retention remained unaffected, while ARA retention increased in response to heat. We conclude that chytrids support pelagic ecosystem functioning under cyanobacteria blooms and global warming via chytrids-conveyed PUFA toward higher trophic levels.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Hungary

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

NRDI Office

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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