Departamento de Biologia & CESAM, Universidade de Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal.
PLoS One. 2013 Aug 5;8(8):e70572. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070572. Print 2013.
Competition is a major driving force in freshwaters, especially given the cyclic nature and dynamics of pelagic food webs. Competition is especially important in the initial species assortment during colonization and re-colonization events, which depends strongly on the environmental context. Subtle changes, such as saline intrusion, may disrupt competitive relationships and, thus, influence community composition. Bearing this in mind, our objective was to assess whether low salinity levels (using NaCl as a proxy) alter the competitive outcome (measured as the rate of population biomass increase) of Daphnia-Simocephalus experimental microcosms, taking into account interactions with priority effects (sequential species arrival order). With this approach, we aimed to experimentally demonstrate a putative mechanism of differential species sorting in brackish environments or in freshwaters facing secondary salinization. Experiments considered three salinity levels, regarding NaCl added (0.00, 0.75 and 1.50 g L(-1)), crossed with three competition scenarios (no priority, priority of Daphnia over Simocephalus, and vice-versa). At lower NaCl concentrations (0.00 and 0.75 g L(-1)), Daphnia was a significantly superior competitor, irrespective of the species inoculation order, suggesting negligible priority effects. However, the strong decrease in Daphnia population growth at 1.50 g L(-1) alleviated the competitive pressure on Simocephalus, causing an inversion of the competitive outcome in favour of Simocephalus. The intensity of this inversion depended on the competition scenario. This salinity-mediated disruption of the competitive outcome demonstrates that subtle environmental changes produce indirect effects in key ecological mechanisms, thus altering community composition, which may lead to serious implications in terms of ecosystem functioning (e.g. lake regime shifts due to reduced grazing) and biodiversity.
竞争是淡水生态系统中的主要驱动力,尤其是考虑到浮游食物网的周期性和动态性。竞争在殖民和再殖民事件中的初始物种组合中尤为重要,这强烈依赖于环境背景。微妙的变化,如盐度入侵,可能会破坏竞争关系,从而影响群落组成。考虑到这一点,我们的目标是评估低盐度水平(使用 NaCl 作为替代物)是否会改变 Daphnia-Simocephalus 实验微宇宙的竞争结果(以种群生物量增长率来衡量),同时考虑到优先效应(顺序物种到达顺序)的相互作用。通过这种方法,我们旨在通过实验证明在半咸水环境或面临二次盐化的淡水中,物种分类的潜在机制。实验考虑了三个盐度水平,涉及添加的 NaCl(0.00、0.75 和 1.50 g L(-1)),与三个竞争情景(无优先、Daphnia 优先于 Simocephalus 以及反之亦然)交叉。在较低的 NaCl 浓度(0.00 和 0.75 g L(-1))下,无论物种接种顺序如何,Daphnia 都是明显更具竞争力的竞争者,这表明优先效应可以忽略不计。然而,在 1.50 g L(-1)时 Daphnia 种群增长的强烈下降减轻了对 Simocephalus 的竞争压力,导致竞争结果有利于 Simocephalus 的反转。这种反转的强度取决于竞争情景。这种由盐度介导的竞争结果的破坏表明,微妙的环境变化会对关键生态机制产生间接影响,从而改变群落组成,这可能会对生态系统功能(例如由于放牧减少导致的湖泊状态转变)和生物多样性产生严重影响。