Abstract
The microcosm is a laboratory method frequently used in ecological studies related to population and food web interactions and environmental dynamics. It simultaneously brings into interaction different species in the same controlled laboratory experimental area and provides an opportunity for modeling and reconstruction of relationships in the natural biocenoses and ecosystems. We applied that approach to determine and improve our understanding of predator–prey interactions in different freshwater environments. The inhabitants of the microcosms were isolated endosymbiotic microalga Desmodesmus subspicatus (Chlorophyceae) (Chodat) Hegewald et Schmidt (CZ), green hydras, freshwater turbellarians, and large water fleas. Experiments were performed in five replicates, at 25 °C and 13.5 °C, with fed and hungry predators, respectively. Herein, we proposed a mechanism for microalgal hunting net formation in the freshwater microcosm. Ultrastructural visualization of the endosymbiotic microalgae revealed rod-like structures on the cell wall surface, structures that could possibly fit together and interconnect, suggesting the possibility of microalgal hunting net formation. Interspecific cooperation between isolated microalgae and turbellarians resulted in stronger hunting net formation in preying upon water fleas. This study contributes to the diversity of species interactions and shows the producers as a top link, as opposed to what is generally considered as a basic link in the food web, and presents the microalgae as triggers of the dynamics in the freshwater microcosm.
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