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Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities

Documentation of how interactions among members of different stream communities [e.g., microbial communities and aquatic insect taxa exhibiting different feeding strategies (FS)] collectively influence the growth, survival, and recruitment of stream fishes is limited. Considerable spatial overlap ex...

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Autores principales: Walquist, Ryan W., Scribner, Kim T., Waraniak, Justin, Bauman, John M., Marsh, Terence L., Kanefsky, Jeannette, Larson, Douglas L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36409729
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277336
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author Walquist, Ryan W.
Scribner, Kim T.
Waraniak, Justin
Bauman, John M.
Marsh, Terence L.
Kanefsky, Jeannette
Larson, Douglas L.
author_facet Walquist, Ryan W.
Scribner, Kim T.
Waraniak, Justin
Bauman, John M.
Marsh, Terence L.
Kanefsky, Jeannette
Larson, Douglas L.
author_sort Walquist, Ryan W.
collection PubMed
description Documentation of how interactions among members of different stream communities [e.g., microbial communities and aquatic insect taxa exhibiting different feeding strategies (FS)] collectively influence the growth, survival, and recruitment of stream fishes is limited. Considerable spatial overlap exists between early life stages of stream fishes, including species of conservation concern like lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens), and aquatic insects and microbial taxa that abundantly occupy substrates on which spawning occurs. Habitat overlap suggests that species interactions across trophic levels may be common, but outcomes of these interactions are poorly understood. We conducted an experiment where lake sturgeon eggs were fertilized and incubated in the presence of individuals from one of four aquatic insect FS taxa including predators, facultative and obligate-scrapers, collector-filterers/facultative predators, and a control (no insects). We quantified and compared the effects of different insect taxa on the taxonomic composition and relative abundance of egg surface bacterial and lower eukaryotic communities, egg size, incubation time to hatch, free embryo body size (total length) at hatch, yolk-sac area, (a measure of resource utilization), and percent survival to hatch. Mean egg size varied significantly among insect treatments. Eggs exposed to predators had a lower mean percent survival to hatch. Eggs exposed to predators had significantly shorter incubation periods. At hatch, free embryos exposed to predators had significantly smaller yolk sacs and total length. Multivariate analyses revealed that egg bacterial and lower eukaryotic surface community composition varied significantly among insect treatments and between time periods (1 vs 4 days post-fertilization). Quantitative PCR documented significant differences in bacterial 16S copy number, and thus abundance on egg surfaces varied across insect treatments. Results indicate that lethal and non-lethal effects associated with interactions between lake sturgeon eggs and free embryos and aquatic insects, particularly predators, contributed to lake sturgeon trait variability that may affect population levels of recruitment.
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spelling pubmed-96782662022-11-22 Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities Walquist, Ryan W. Scribner, Kim T. Waraniak, Justin Bauman, John M. Marsh, Terence L. Kanefsky, Jeannette Larson, Douglas L. PLoS One Research Article Documentation of how interactions among members of different stream communities [e.g., microbial communities and aquatic insect taxa exhibiting different feeding strategies (FS)] collectively influence the growth, survival, and recruitment of stream fishes is limited. Considerable spatial overlap exists between early life stages of stream fishes, including species of conservation concern like lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens), and aquatic insects and microbial taxa that abundantly occupy substrates on which spawning occurs. Habitat overlap suggests that species interactions across trophic levels may be common, but outcomes of these interactions are poorly understood. We conducted an experiment where lake sturgeon eggs were fertilized and incubated in the presence of individuals from one of four aquatic insect FS taxa including predators, facultative and obligate-scrapers, collector-filterers/facultative predators, and a control (no insects). We quantified and compared the effects of different insect taxa on the taxonomic composition and relative abundance of egg surface bacterial and lower eukaryotic communities, egg size, incubation time to hatch, free embryo body size (total length) at hatch, yolk-sac area, (a measure of resource utilization), and percent survival to hatch. Mean egg size varied significantly among insect treatments. Eggs exposed to predators had a lower mean percent survival to hatch. Eggs exposed to predators had significantly shorter incubation periods. At hatch, free embryos exposed to predators had significantly smaller yolk sacs and total length. Multivariate analyses revealed that egg bacterial and lower eukaryotic surface community composition varied significantly among insect treatments and between time periods (1 vs 4 days post-fertilization). Quantitative PCR documented significant differences in bacterial 16S copy number, and thus abundance on egg surfaces varied across insect treatments. Results indicate that lethal and non-lethal effects associated with interactions between lake sturgeon eggs and free embryos and aquatic insects, particularly predators, contributed to lake sturgeon trait variability that may affect population levels of recruitment. Public Library of Science 2022-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9678266/ /pubmed/36409729 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277336 Text en © 2022 Walquist et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Walquist, Ryan W.
Scribner, Kim T.
Waraniak, Justin
Bauman, John M.
Marsh, Terence L.
Kanefsky, Jeannette
Larson, Douglas L.
Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
title Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
title_full Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
title_fullStr Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
title_full_unstemmed Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
title_short Aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
title_sort aquatic insects differentially affect lake sturgeon larval phenotypes and egg surface microbial communities
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36409729
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277336
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