Abstract

In organisms with dormant stages, life‐history responses to past pollution can be studied retrospectively. Here, we study such responses in a rotifer (Brachionus calyciflorus) from the once heavily copper‐polluted Lake Orta (Italy). We extracted resting eggs from sediments, established clonal lineages from hatchlings, and exposed newborns of these lineages to one of three copper concentrations that each mimicked a specific period in the lake's pollution history. For each rotifer, we daily collected life‐table data. We then estimated treatment‐specific vital rates and used a stage‐structured population model to project population growth rate λ. We also estimated elasticities of λ to vital rates and contributions of vital rates to observed Δλ between copper treatments. As expected, λ decreased with increasing copper concentration. This decrease resulted mostly from a decline in juvenile survival rate (SJ ) and partly from a decline in the survival rate of asexually reproducing females (SA ). Maturation rate, and with one exception fecundity, also declined but did not contribute consistently to Δλ. λ was most elastic to SJ and SA , indicating that survival rates were under stronger selection than maturation rate and fecundity. Together, our results indicate that variation in juvenile survival is a key component in the rotifers’ copper response. The consistent decrease in SJ with increasing copper stress and the sensitivity of λ to that decrease also suggest that juvenile survival is a useful indicator of population performance under environmental pollution.

Highlights

  • In organisms with dormant stages, life-history responses to past pollution can be studied retrospectively

  • We studied how rotifer vital rates respond to increasing copper pollution and whether these responses alter population fitness

  • For a vital rate to alter population fitness under environmental change, and for doing so in a predictable way, two conditions must be met: the vital rate must covary with the environment; and population fitness must be sensitive to the variation in the vital rate (Benton & Grant, 1999)

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Summary

| METHODS

The study organism Brachionus calyciflorus represents a globally distributed complex of cryptic species (Papakostas et al, 2016). To start clonal stock cultures (lineages), we transferred hatchlings to individual Petri dishes (diameter: 35 mm) filled with artificial freshwater (Sommer, Nandini, et al, 2016). To obtain experimental rotifers from each lineage, we transferred egg-carrying, amictic females individually to round, capped plastic boxes (diameter × height: 22 mm × 13 mm) filled with 1 mL of culture medium containing food ad libitum. These boxes were stored at 20 °C in darkness. We randomly selected newborn females as the experimental individuals

| Experimental procedures
| DISCUSSION
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