Baillieul M, De Wachter B, Blust R
University of Antwerp, Department of Biology, Belgium.
Physiol Zool. 1998 Nov-Dec;71(6):703-7. doi: 10.1086/515985.
The swimming velocity of the water flea Daphnia magna is dependent on its body size. Therefore, environmental factors that influence growth also influence swimming velocity. This study examined whether exposure to increased salinity reduces swimming velocity only through its effect on body size or whether it also reduces size-specific swimming velocity. Initially, size-specific swimming velocity decreased in a salinity-dependent way. Thereafter, swimming velocities gradually returned to their expected values in all treatments. This acclimation coincided with considerable mortality in the highest-salinity treatment, indicating that daphnids in this treatment either acclimated or died. The initial decrease in size-specific swimming velocity could not be explained by decreased uptake of food. Thus, the results indicate that salinity temporarily impaired physiology. The experiment illustrates how size effects can be accounted for in swimming-velocity analysis and how size-specific swimming-velocity analysis can be used as a non-invasive method to detect stress-induced deviations from normal physiology.
大型水蚤的游泳速度取决于其体型大小。因此,影响生长的环境因素也会影响游泳速度。本研究探讨了暴露于盐度增加的环境中是否仅通过对体型的影响来降低游泳速度,还是也会降低特定体型的游泳速度。最初,特定体型的游泳速度以盐度依赖的方式下降。此后,所有处理组的游泳速度逐渐恢复到预期值。这种适应与最高盐度处理组中的高死亡率同时出现,表明该处理组中的大型水蚤要么适应了环境,要么死亡。特定体型游泳速度的最初下降不能用食物摄取减少来解释。因此,结果表明盐度暂时损害了生理机能。该实验说明了在游泳速度分析中如何考虑体型效应,以及特定体型游泳速度分析如何作为一种非侵入性方法来检测应激引起的偏离正常生理状态的情况。