Effect of periodical starvation on the life
history of Brachionus plicatilis O.F. Müller (Rotifera): a possible
strategy for population stability.
Yoshinaga,T., Hagiwara, A., Tsukamoto,K.-2000
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology,
253: 253-260
Abstract:
To estimate the changes in the life history of the
rotifer Brachionus plicatilis O.F. Müller under starvation, we carried out
an individual culture and determined the effects of periodical food
deprivation on its asexual reproductive characteristics such as lifespan,
reproductive period, age at first egg and offspring production, and lifetime
fecundity (total number of offspring produced in her lifetime). Rotifers
were fed for 1-3 h daily, and were then starved until the next day. Control
animals were fed throughout their lifespan. Starved rotifers matured and
produced their first offspring at an older age than the control animals. The
periodical starvation resulted in a decrease in the lifetime fecundity to
less than half that of the non-starved control. The reproductive period and
lifespan were 2-3 times longer in the starved animals than in the control
animals. The negative relationship between lifespan and lifetime fecundity
is interpreted as a trade-off in an alternative life-history strategy of
rotifers under starved conditions. The great decrease is fecundity and
extension of lifespan enables rotifers to compensate to keep the population
in equilibrium.
(Behavior and Ecology, Department of Marine
Bioscience, Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, 1-15-1
Minamidai, Nakano, Tokyo 164-8639, Japan, tel: +81-3-5351-6520, fax:
+81-3-5351-6514, e-mail: yosinaga@ori.u-tokyo.ac.jp)