Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Free-living stages of parasites are consumed by a variety of predators, which might have important consequences for predators, parasites, and hosts. For example, zooplankton prey on the infectious stage of the amphibian chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), a pathogen responsible for amphibian population declines and extinctions worldwide. Predation on parasites is predicted to influence community structure and function, and affect disease risk, but relatively few studies have explored its consequences empirically. We investigated interactions among Rana cascadae tadpoles, zooplankton, and Bd in a fully factorial experiment in outdoor mesocosms. We measured growth, development, survival, and infection of amphibians and took weekly measurements of the abundance of zooplankton, phytoplankton (suspended algae), and periphyton (attached algae). We hypothesized that zooplankton might have positive indirect effects on tadpoles by consuming Bd zoospores and by consuming phytoplankton, thus reducing the shading of a major tadpole resource, periphyton. We also hypothesized that zooplankton would have negative effects on tadpoles, mediated by competition for algal resources. Mixed-effects models, repeated-measures ANOVAs, and a structural equation model revealed that zooplankton significantly reduced phytoplankton but had no detectable effects on Bd or periphyton. Hence, the indirect positive effects of zooplankton on tadpoles were negligible when compared to the indirect negative effect mediated by competition for phytoplankton. We conclude that examination of host-pathogen dynamics within a community context may be necessary to elucidate complex community dynamics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-014-3165-6DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hypothesized zooplankton
8
effects tadpoles
8
mediated competition
8
zooplankton
7
trophic dynamics
4
dynamics aquatic
4
community
4
aquatic community
4
community interactions
4
interactions primary
4

Similar Publications

Effects of food quantity and quality on the life history of in Mwanza Gulf (Lake Victoria, Tanzania).

J Plankton Res

August 2025

Wageningen Universiy & Research, Aquaculture and Fisheries Group, De Elst 1, Wageningen 6708 WD, the Netherlands.

Until the 1950s, large-bodied calanoids and cladocerans dominated the zooplankton community of Lake Victoria, whereas cyclopoid copepods only comprised 10% of microcrustaceans. From the 1960's onwards, cyclopoid copepods increased to 70-90% of zooplankton and cladocerans, now dominated by small species, decreased to ca. 5%.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Technology Solutions for Overcoming the Coral Recruitment Bottleneck.

Environ Sci Technol

August 2025

School of Earth Sciences, The Ohio State University, 125 S. Oval Mall, Columbus, Ohio 43210, United States.

Recruitment is a vital demographic process that replenishes populations and increases genetic variation, making it fundamental to ecological resilience. On coral reefs, rates of coral recruitment and post-recruitment survivorship are naturally low, resulting in a bottleneck to population growth and restoration efforts. Therefore, we investigated the potential that two technologies, specialized settlement modules and the Underwater Zooplankton Enhancement Light Array (UZELA), improve early life success.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Moonfish (Mene maculata) has been recognized as a prospective commercial species in Taiwanese waters; however, its diet and trophic ecology remain poorly understood. It was hypothesized that diet composition and trophic position (TP) vary with body size and monsoonal environmental changes. This study presents the first investigation of its feeding ecology in southwest Taiwan (SWT), focusing on seasonal and ontogenetic variation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microbial responses to crude oil and cadmium pollution in a tropical coastal environment, Gulf of Guinea.

Mar Pollut Bull

November 2025

Aarhus University, Department of Biology - Aquatic Biology, Denmark; LakeAid, Life Science Fyn, Svendborg, Denmark. Electronic address:

Crude oil and cadmium (Cd) are common pollutants in Ghana's coastal ecosystems, where the cyanobacterial phytoplankton Synechococcus sp. serves as the primary producer and forms the base of the marine food web alongside small grazers. We hypothesized that cadmium and crude oil would disrupt microbial community structure and function, with the strongest effects under combined exposure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Synchronous responses to tidal restriction by seawall construction across fish and plankton communities in Yangtze River Estuary.

Mar Environ Res

September 2025

School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai, People's Republic of China; Yangtze Delta Estuarine Wetland Ecosystem Observation and Research Station, Ministry of Education and Shanghai Science and Technology Committee, Shanghai, People's Republic of China. Electronic address: xdji

Tidal restriction caused by seawall construction exerts profound impacts on coastal wetland ecosystems, typically aimed at restoring vegetation and avian diversity. However, studies on non-target aquatic organisms under tidal restriction remain scarce. In our study, we hypothesized congruent responses of fish, zooplankton, and phytoplankton communities to tidal restriction between naturally unrestricted creeks and tide-restricted marshlands in Chongming Dongtan, Yangtze River Estuary.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF