Clonal structure and depth selection during a Caullerya mesnili epidemic in a hybridizing population of the Daphnia longispina complex

2017 
Daphnia perform diel vertical migration (DVM), a predator-avoidance strategy to migrate towards deeper and colder layers in the water column in the morning and movement to the algae-rich surface layers in the evening. However, individuals performing DVM incur several trade-offs since they might suffer from resource limitation and a slower instantaneous birth rate in deeper depths. DVM patterns may be modified by abiotic factors such as temperature, food concentration, or pH and vary among different Daphnia species and genotypes. Furthermore, Daphnia host a variety of microparasites that might pose an additional factor influencing DVM behaviour. For infected individuals, migration into cooler temperature layers might slow down parasite growth. Moreover, parasites can increase opacity of their hosts. Non-migrating individuals might then be selectively purged from the upper layers by visually hunting predators. With these premises we asked, whether epidemics of the ichthyosporean parasite Caullerya mesnili affect or are affected by the DVM behaviour of Daphnia in Lake Greifensee, Switzerland by analysing the vertical distribution of Daphnia during day and night on two dates. Furthermore, we were interested whether a potential interaction depends on host genotype. We therefore studied the genotypic composition of the integrated population in regular sampling intervals over the course of one year and on a fine-grained vertical resolution during the Caullerya epidemic in late summer. Since Caullerya-infected Daphnia migrated equally well as uninfected ones, the findings of this study suggest that Caullerya epidemics neither affected nor were affected by the DVM behaviour of Daphnia. We observed clonal succession in the lake but could not link this succession to the Caullerya epidemic; all except one of the common multilocus genotypes were under-infected. In addition, outbreak and course of this Caullerya epidemic seemed to rely mainly on environmental cues. Because this first study only provides a snapshot of time, we hope that further studies will be done to verify our results.
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