Frenken Thijs, Wierenga Joren, Gsell Alena S, van Donk Ellen, Rohrlack Thomas, Van de Waal Dedmer B
Department of Aquatic Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW),Wageningen, Netherlands.
Department of Biology, University of UtrechtUtrecht, Netherlands.
Front Microbiol. 2017 Jun 6;8:1015. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01015. eCollection 2017.
Human activities have dramatically altered nutrient fluxes from the landscape into receiving waters. As a result, not only the concentration of nutrients in surface waters has increased, but also their elemental ratios have changed. Such shifts in resource supply ratios will alter autotroph stoichiometry, which may in turn have consequences for higher trophic levels, including parasites. Here, we hypothesize that parasite elemental composition will follow changes in the stoichiometry of its host, and that its reproductive success will decrease with host nutrient limitation. We tested this hypothesis by following the response of a host-parasite system to changes in nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) supply in a controlled laboratory experiment. To this end, we exposed a fungal parasite (the chytrid ) to its host (the freshwater cyanobacterium ) under control, low N:P and high N:P conditions. Host N:P followed treatment conditions, with a decreased N:P ratio under low N:P supply, and an increased N:P ratio under high N:P supply, as compared to the control. Shifts in host N:P stoichiometry were reflected in the parasite stoichiometry. Furthermore, at low N:P supply, host intracellular microcystin concentration was lowered as compared to high N:P supply. In contrast to our hypothesis, zoospore production decreased at low N:P and increased at high N:P ratio as compared to the control. These findings suggest that fungal parasites have a relatively high N, but low P requirement. Furthermore, zoospore elemental content, and thereby presumably their size, decreased at high N:P ratios. From these results we hypothesize that fungal parasites may exhibit a trade-off between zoospore size and production. Since zooplankton can graze on chytrid zoospores, changes in parasite production, stoichiometry and cell size may have implications for aquatic food web dynamics.
人类活动已极大地改变了从陆地到接受水体的养分通量。结果,不仅地表水的养分浓度增加了,而且它们的元素比例也发生了变化。资源供应比例的这种变化将改变自养生物的化学计量,这进而可能对包括寄生虫在内的更高营养级产生影响。在此,我们假设寄生虫的元素组成将随其宿主化学计量的变化而变化,并且其繁殖成功率将随着宿主养分限制而降低。我们通过在受控实验室实验中跟踪宿主 - 寄生虫系统对氮(N)和磷(P)供应变化的响应来检验这一假设。为此,我们在对照、低N:P和高N:P条件下,将一种真菌寄生虫(壶菌)暴露于其宿主(淡水蓝细菌)。宿主的N:P遵循处理条件,与对照相比,在低N:P供应下N:P比例降低,在高N:P供应下N:P比例增加。宿主N:P化学计量的变化反映在寄生虫的化学计量中。此外,与高N:P供应相比,在低N:P供应下宿主细胞内微囊藻毒素浓度降低。与我们的假设相反,与对照相比,游动孢子产量在低N:P时降低,在高N:P比例时增加。这些发现表明真菌寄生虫对N的需求相对较高,但对P的需求较低。此外,在高N:P比例下,游动孢子的元素含量以及由此推测的其大小降低。从这些结果我们假设真菌寄生虫可能在游动孢子大小和产量之间表现出权衡。由于浮游动物可以捕食壶菌游动孢子,寄生虫产量、化学计量和细胞大小的变化可能对水生食物网动态产生影响。