Details zur Publikation |
| Kategorie | Textpublikation |
| Referenztyp | Zeitschriften |
| DOI | 10.1890/ES11-00157.1 |
| Titel (primär) | Significant habitat effects influence protist fitness: evidence for local adaptation from acidic mining lakes |
| Autor | Weisse, T.; Berendonk, T.; Kamjunke, N.; Moser, M.; Scheffel, U.; Stadler, P.; Weithoff, G. |
| Quelle | Ecosphere |
| Erscheinungsjahr | 2011 |
| Department | FLOEK |
| Band/Volume | 2 |
| Heft | 12 |
| Seite von | art. 134 |
| Sprache | englisch |
| Keywords | allopatric speciation; Chlamydomonas acidophila; ciliates; everything is everywhere; flagellates; freshwater microbes; habitat-species interaction; local adaptation; Ochromonas spp; Oxytricha spp |
| Abstract | It is
currently controversially discussed if the same freshwater
microorganisms occur worldwide wherever their required habitats are
realized, i.e., without any adaptation to local conditions below the
species level. We performed laboratory experiments with flagellates and
ciliates from three acidic mining lakes (AML, pH |
| dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung | https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=11952 |
| Weisse, T., Berendonk, T., Kamjunke, N., Moser, M., Scheffel, U., Stadler, P., Weithoff, G. (2011): Significant habitat effects influence protist fitness: evidence for local adaptation from acidic mining lakes Ecosphere 2 (12), art. 134 10.1890/ES11-00157.1 |
|
2.7)
to investigate if similar habitats may affect similar organisms
differently. Such man-made lakes provide suitable ecosystem models to
test for the significance of strong habitat selection. To this end, we
analyzed the growth response of three protist taxa (three strains of the
phytoflagellate Chlamydomonas acidophila, two isolates of the phytoflagellate Ochromonas and two species of the ciliate genus Oxytricha)
by exposing them to lake water of their origin and from the two other
AML in a cross-factorial design. Population growth rates were measured
as a proxy for their fitness. Results revealed significant effects of
strain, lake (=habitat), and strain × habitat interaction. In the
environmentally most adverse AML, all three protist taxa were locally
adapted. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that (1) the same habitat
may affect strains of the same species differently and that (2) similar
habitats may harbor ecophysiologically different strains or species.
These results contradict the ‘everything is everywhere' paradigm.