Species-specific oxylipins and the effects of ontogeny and predation on their emission from freshwater snails.

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: May 2024


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Chemical cues play important roles in mediating ecological interactions. Oxylipins, oxygenated metabolites of fatty acids, are one signalling molecule type that influences the physiology and function of species, suggesting their broader significance in chemical communication within aquatic systems. Yet, our current understanding of their function is restricted taxonomically and contextually making it difficult to infer their ecological significance. Snails and leeches are ubiquitous in freshwater ecosystems worldwide, yet little is known about their oxylipin profiles and the factors that cause their profiles to change. As snails and leeches differ taxonomically and represent different trophic groups, we postulated oxylipin profile differences. For snails, we hypothesized that ontogeny (non-reproductive vs reproductive) and predation (non-infested vs leech-infested) would affect oxylipin profiles. Oxylipins were characterized from water conditioned with the snail Planorbella duryi and leech Helobdella lineata, and included three treatment types (snails, leeches, and leech-infested snails) with the snails consisting of three size classes: small (5-6 mm, non-reproductive) and medium and large (13-14 and 19-20 mm, reproductive). The two species differed in the composition of their oxylipin profiles both in diversity and amounts. Further, ontogeny and predation affected the diversity of oxylipins emitted by snails. Our experimental profiles of oxylipins show that chemical cues within freshwater systems vary depending upon the species emitting the signals, the developmental stage of the species, as well as from ecological interactions such as predation. We also identified some candidates, like 9-HETE and PGE, that could be explored more directly for their physiological and ecological roles in freshwater systems.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2024.111607DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

snails leeches
12
oxylipin profiles
12
ontogeny predation
8
snails
8
chemical cues
8
ecological interactions
8
profiles oxylipins
8
freshwater systems
8
profiles
5
species-specific oxylipins
4

Similar Publications

This review explores the vectorial principles underlying sensorimotor decoding across diverse biological systems. From the encoding of light wavelength in retinal cones to direction-specific motor cortex activity in primates, neural representations frequently rely on population vector coding-a scheme, in which neurons with directional or modality-specific preferences integrate their activity to encode stimuli or motor commands. Early studies on color vision and motor control introduced concepts of vector summation and neuronal tuning, evolving toward more precise models such as the von Mises distribution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mosquito, Uranotaenia anhydor, certainly seems to be the rarest mosquito in America north of Mexico. The type species location is San Diego, CA, but is no longer present there. I collected it in Saratoga Springs, a remote oasis in Death Valley, CA, after a 65-year absence in scientific literature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Macrobenthic invertebrate structure, diversity, and water quality indicators in Jhelum tributaries of Kashmir Himalaya.

Environ Monit Assess

July 2025

Fish Biology and Limnology Research Laboratory, Department of Zoology, University of Kashmir, Srinagar-190006, Jammu and Kashmir, India.

Macrobenthic invertebrate communities are groups of large, bottom-dwelling organisms without backbone that inhabit aquatic environments such as streams, rivers, ponds, wetlands, lakes, and oceans. These communities represent diverse invertebrate groups which include aquatic worms, leeches, clams, snails, amphipods, crabs, aquatic mites, and insect larvae. Macrobenthic invertebrates are regarded as primary functional feeding groups in the fluvial ecosystems and an outstanding tool for monitoring the water quality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Flotation of aquatic worms and other hyponeuston.

Interface Focus

May 2025

George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA.

The California blackworm, , lives underwater and latches its tail to the water surface for respiration and stability. Little is known about the upward force generated by this posture. In this combined experimental and theoretical study, we visualize the menisci shape for blackworms and blackworm mimics, composed of smooth and corrugated epoxy rods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study focuses on Helobdella lineata, a l eechnative to northeastern North Carolina, providing the first detailed description of the species over a twelve-year period.
  • Researchers collected 404 specimens from various locations, observing significant variability in dorsal papillae and pigment patterns, which suggest adaptive camouflage rather than separate species.
  • A key discovery is H. lineata's unique adaptation for feeding on snails, involving specialized salivary cells that enable extra-oral digestion before ingestion, marking a major evolutionary change in its feeding mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF