Abstract

The utilization of storage lipids and their associated fatty acids (FA) is an important means for organisms to cope with periods of food shortage, however, little is known about the dynamics and FA mobilization in benthic copepods (order Harpacticoida). Furthermore, lipid depletion and FA mobilization may depend on the ambient temperature. Therefore, we subjected the temperate copepod Platychelipus littoralis to several intervals (3, 6 and 14 days) of food deprivation, under two temperatures in the range of the normal habitat temperature (4, 15°C) and under an elevated temperature (24°C), and studied the changes in FA composition of storage and membrane lipids. Although bulk depletion of storage FA occurred after a few days of food deprivation under 4°C and 15°C, copepod survival remained high during the experiment, suggesting the catabolization of other energy sources. Ambient temperature affected both the degree of FA depletion and the FA mobilization. In particular, storage FA were more exhausted and FA mobilization was more selective under 15°C compared with 4°C. In contrast, depletion of storage FA was limited under an elevated temperature, potentially due to a switch to partial anaerobiosis. Food deprivation induced selective DHA retention in the copepod’s membrane, under all temperatures. However, prolonged exposure to heat and nutritional stress eventually depleted DHA in the membranes, and potentially induced high copepod mortality. Storage lipids clearly played an important role in the short-term response of the copepod P. littoralis to food deprivation. However, under elevated temperature, the use of storage FA as an energy source is compromised.

Highlights

  • Many aquatic habitats are shaped by a pulsed seasonal primary production which implies a restricted food availability for various herbivores at certain times

  • Dead copepods were already observed after 3 days of food deprivation under 24°C

  • The original storage fatty acids (FA) content (115.1±9.9 μg FA/ mg dry weight (mg DW)) decreased significantly after 3 days of starvation (p

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Many aquatic habitats are shaped by a pulsed seasonal primary production which implies a restricted food availability for various herbivores at certain times. One strategy to cope with these natural cycles of food intake is the efficient storage and utilization of energy reserves [1,2]. Lipids contain the highest energy content compared with carbohydrates and proteins [3] and are a major energy storage product of cladocerans and copepods [4]. Storage lipids are PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0151779. Temperature Affects the Use of Storage Fatty Acids Storage lipids are PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0151779 March 17, 2016

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call