• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: The Energy Budget of Two Sympatric Daphnia Species in Lake Constance: Productivity and Energy Residence Times
  • Beteiligte: Geller, Walter
  • Erschienen: Springer-Verlag, 1989
  • Erschienen in: Oecologia
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISSN: 0029-8549; 1432-1939
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  • Beschreibung: <p> Two Daphnia species, D. hyalina and D. galeata, are living in Lake Constance. Both populations show logistic growth, with the phase of exponential increase in May and the phase of steady state during the summer. In spring, food is not limited and both daphnids reveal an 'exploitative' strategy: females mature early, primiparae are small, egg weights are small, but clutch sizes are large. From June on, when food limiting conditions prevail, D. hyalina starts to migrate vertically with a diurnal rhythm whereas D. galeata keeps on living in the epilimnion over the whole season. The differing thermal environments of the populations lead to short generation times (age of first reproduction) of 11 days for D. galeata in mid-summer, and to 47 days (July) for D. hyalina. The annual production (P) of D. hyalina and D. galeata were 18 and 24 g<tex-math>$\text{DW}/\text{m}^{2}$</tex-math>, respectively. The average standing stocks (B) were 1.6 and 0.9 g<tex-math>$\text{DW}/\text{m}^{2}$</tex-math>. This corresponds to turnover rates of 11 × and 27 × per season (200 days), and to turnover times of 18 days and 7.5 days, respectively. From 1980 to 1982 the cumulative annual primary production (PPR) varied between 260 and 330 g C/m<sup>2</sup>. The common productivity (P) of the functional component 'Daphnia' (= sum of both Daphnia species) followed the PPR, but the Daphnia standing stock was constant at 2.5 g<tex-math>$\text{DW}/\text{m}^{2}$</tex-math>. The increase of secondary production (P) was a consequence of a shift in abundance between the two Daphnia species: at low PPR, D. hyalina was 4 × more abundant, but at high PPR, the two species were equally abundant. Such internal regulatory mechanism within a system component is in accordance with the hypothesis of Cheslak and Lamarra (1981): increase of 'energy residence time' (B/R) with declining nutrients and increasing strength of competitive interrelationships within a given functional component of an ecosystem. </p>