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  • Rotifera  (79)
  • Springer  (79)
  • American Geophysical Union
  • American Meteorological Society
  • Oxford University Press
  • 2020-2024
  • 1995-1999  (79)
  • 1990-1994
  • 1998  (79)
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  • Springer  (79)
  • American Geophysical Union
  • American Meteorological Society
  • Oxford University Press
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  • 2020-2024
  • 1995-1999  (79)
  • 1990-1994
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Cephalodella segersi n.sp. ; C. catellina ; C. fluviatilis ; C. maior ; Notommatidae ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A new species of rotifer, Cephalodella segersi n.sp., is described from littoral periphyton of the man-made Lake Blankaart, Belgium. The species is closely related to C. catellina and C. fluviatilis. The subspecies C. catellina maior is given species rank. Redescriptions and scanning electron microscope pictures of trophi are given for C. catellina, C. fluviatilis and C. maior.
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  • 2
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 23-26 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Lecane ; Songkhla province ; Thailand
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Eighteen freshwater bodies in Songkhla Province, southern Thailand were investigated for rotifers of the genus Lecane. A total of 23 species were identified. The majority of species found were cosmopolitan (43%) or tropicopolitan (39%). The rest were oriental (9%) and palaeotropical (9%). The most common species was L. bulla (61% of the plankton samples taken), while L. aculeata, L. arcula, L. blachei, L. stenroosi and L. tenuiseta were rare (only found once). The greatest species diversity was found in Khlong-Hla reservoir (14 species).
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  • 3
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 35-37 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Keratella trapezoida n. sp. ; taxonomy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A new species of planktonic rotifer, Keratella trapezoida n. sp. is described from the Yangtze River, P.R. China. The new morphospecies is characterized by its four enclosed dorsal median facets, nearly trapezoid shape of the first median facet on dorsal plate, and the caudal median facet with parallel margins and being open posteriorly.
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  • 4
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 39-46 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; floodplain ; ephemeral waters ; species diversity ; habitat partitioning ; opportunism ; food webs ; predation ; Copepoda
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Spring surveys of 112 temporary floodplain waters on River Murray tributaries demonstrated a heterogeneous habitat series, with ca. 500 species of microfauna encountered. Rotifers comprised the most diverse group (〉250 taxa), however mean diversity was low (10.93 ± 7.5), in part reflecting predation by copepods and macroinvertebrates. Notably, only 10 rotifer species could be considered widespread in the study area. Ephemeral pool microfaunal communities were distinct from those of adjacent permanent billabongs; their community variability is seen as a function of, or response to, habitat heterogeneity. The significance of high species diversity in ephemeral waters is considered in the context of age of the Murray-Darling Basin, which has persisted in its present location since the breakup of Gondwana, 〉65 MY BP.
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  • 5
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 131-134 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: SEM ; Rotifera ; methodology ; anesthesia ; deciliation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The scanning electron microscope (SEM) is a powerful tool to observe any surface at the ultrastructural level. During the last 15 years, I developed techniques to process rotifer specimens for SEM observation, in order to obtain images of preserved specimens that simulate their natural appearance. A characteristic feature in Rotifera is the rotatory apparatus (corona) and SEM is appropriate for studying its organization. The organization of the corona is better understood if the rotatory apparatus can be examined after the cilia have been removed. A method to prepare the rotifers for observation by SEM is presented.
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  • 6
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 171-178 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; redundancy analysis ; reservoir ; bottom-up factors ; top-down factors ; competition ; multidimensional analysis ; time series
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Seasonal changes of the plankton rotifer community in an eutrophic Czech reservoir were evaluated in relation to 46 environmental variables. To do this, data of rotifer abundance from three growing seasons (1993 – 1995) were analyzed. The seasonal dynamics of rotifers in all three years were characterized by two distinctive aspects: (1) the spring peak, with both maximum density and maximum species diversity, was dominated by Keratella cochlearis, K. hiemalis, K. quadrata and Polyarthra dolichoptera; (2) the summer-autumnal peak (or several lower peaks) of about half the intensity of the spring one, was composed mainly of Keratella cochlearis, Trichocerca similis and Polyarthra vulgaris. The separation between these two peaks coincided with the decline of phytoplankton and development of a clear-water phase in this reservoir. In redundancy analysis, species-abundance data for rotifers were related to all measured environmental variables. Date, abundance of Cyclops vicinus, total nitrogen, primary production, surface temperature, and density of heterotrophic nanoflagellates were identified as the most important variables. Partial redundancy analysis was used to assess the significance of pure and date-structured environmental factors influencing rotifers during the season. Date-structured environmental factors (such as physical and chemical variables, food, competition, and predation) significantly affected the rotifer community. This study shows that the rotifers in the reservoir are controlled by both abiotic and biotic factors.
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  • 7
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 267-276 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; chemoreception ; chemical ecology ; sensory ; predation ; mating ; mixis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract One of the primary channels of sensory input for zooplankton are chemical signals. Much zooplankton behavior is triggered by chemical stimuli, including feeding, predator defense, mating, and migration. Chemically regulated zooplankton behavior affects larger scale ecosystem processes like grazing, recruitment and secondary production. Knowledge of how chemicals transmit information about location, food quality, conspecifics, competitors, and predators is critical for understanding how aquatic ecosystems function. This paper reviews the behavioral evidence that planktonic rotifers respond to a variety of chemical stimuli. Although a rich variety of rotifer behaviors are regulated by chemical signals, little progress has been made to isolate and characterize these stimuli. If aquatic ecology is to become a predictive science, knowledge of the mechanisms causing the observed interactions is necessary. Chemical signals need to be isolated, purified, and characterized, and their causal role in regulating population and community processes needs to be demonstrated. Rotifers have chemosensory neurons in their corona and electron microscopy has revealed chemoreceptive pores in the anterior integument of several species. Some rotifers use these chemoreceptors to discriminate food particles based on the flavors on the cell surface. In Asplanchna, prey are discriminated by contact chemoreception. Asplanchna releases a waterborne signal that induces spine formation in several Brachionus species, Keratella cochlearis, K. slacki, and Filinia longisecta. The colonial Sinatherina socialis is defended against fish predation by warts containing unpalatable chemicals that have yet to be identified. Larval settlement in Collotheca gracillipes is determined by the chemistry of aquatic plant surfaces. Larvae prefer the undersurface of leaves where there is a low Ca{++} microhabitat due to photosynthesis. Oviposition in Euchlanis dilatata is restricted to plant surfaces familiar to the maternal female. Hydrogen peroxide and certain prostaglandins stimulate resting egg hatching even in the dark. Sexual reproduction and polymorphism in Asplanchna sieboldi is regulated by dietary tocopherol. A chemical signal that allows assessment of conspecific population density is detected in conditioned media by several rotifer species. Water soluble extracts of Brachionus plicatilis increase mictic female production 1.7 times more than controls. Unknown compounds produced by certain bacteria also increase mixis 4–10 fold over controls. Mate recognition in B. plicatilis is determined by a 29 kD surface glycoprotein called the mate recognition pheromone (MRP). The MRP has been isolated, purified, and a polyclonal antibody against it has been prepared. The structure of the oligosaccharide and protein components of the MRP are currently being characterized. Elucidation of the chemicals regulating rotifer life cycles will make important contributions to the understanding of ecological processes in aquatic communities.
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  • 8
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 327-331 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Bdelloidea ; anhydrobiosis ; extraction method ; humidity ; oxygen
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Naturally dried lichens and mushrooms were collected, stored at various relative humidities and temperatures either under air or argon, and extracted in a 0.2 M sucrose solution to determine the long-term survival of resident bdelloid rotifers. Survivorship of rotifers in samples kept at 21 °C for 8 months declined at both 〈 1% and 76% humidities, but remained the same as the starting levels at 23% and 43% humidities. Lowering the temperature to 4 °C improved survival at both 〈 1% and 76% humidities; at -20 °C and 〈1% humidity, survivorship of rotifers did not decline for up to 18 months. Storage at 21 °C under argon gas improved survival of bdelloids at 〈1% humidity, but not at 76% humidity. These results suggest that several processes, including oxidation reactions, may be partly responsible for death of anhydrobiotic bdelloids. To facilitate taxonomic work it is recommended that naturally dried samples containing bdelloids be stored over a desiccant at temperatures below 0 °C until they are to be rehydrated.
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  • 9
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 451-457 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: taxonomic resolution ; ecological studies ; flooding ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In many long-term, intensive experimental and field studies there often arises a need to trade off taxonomic resolution for ecological answers. Compounding this problem is a taxonomic impediment, the lack of experienced taxonomists capable of processing large numbers of samples to species resolution, especially in groups such as the Rotifera. This paper has two aims: (1) To investigate the level of taxonomic resolution required to determine the impact of a disturbance, in the form of a flood event; (2) to compare the impact of different taxonomic resolutions in assessing biodiversity. Results suggest both family and generic resolution can be used to determine the impact of a flood event and that these levels have some applicability to biodiversity studies. Relatively inexperienced taxonomists who can identify the common rotifers to generic level, can be relied upon to detect disturbance to community structure but their data become unreliable when assessing biodiversity.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Bütgenbach lake ; water quality ; bioindicator(s) ; biomonitoring ; Rotifera ; ecotoxicity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Results are presented on a study of the zooplankton of Bütgenbach reservoir and from the Warche and Holzwarche rivers which feed the reservoir (March and October 1996). The zooplankton was dominated by rotifers in spring and by crustaceans (cladocerans and copepods) in summer and autumn. A temperature gradient developed during summer and a drastic depletion of oxygen and increase in ammonia concentrations was observed below 7 m depth. The water quality of the River Warche was compared upstream and downstream of the lake using bioindication by rotifers and by reproduction ecotoxicological tests on Brachionus calyciflorus on the other hand. The bioindicators reveal an overall improvement in water quality of the Warche downstream of the reservoir, whereas the toxicity assays show a decline in water quality downstream of the lake during the stratification period, due to the release of hypolimnetic water from the dam. So, under special conditions, ecotoxicity assays appear to be more sensitive than bioindication using rotifers saprobic valences.
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  • 11
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 117-121 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; trophi ; preparation ; light microscopy ; scanning electron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The methods to prepare rotifer trophi for light and scanning electron microscopy are reviewed, and the rapid method used by the author is described. Rotifers are dissolved in a minimal amount of sodium hypochlorite solution on a coverslip, and serially rinsed in distilled water. The entire procedure is done under a microscope using micropipettes.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Acanthocephala ; aschelminthes ; cladistics ; evolution ; Gnathostomulida ; phylogeny ; pseudocoelomates ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We investigated phylogenetic relationships of phylum Rotifera using cladistic analysis to uncover all most-parsimonious trees from a data set comprising 60 morphological characters of nine taxa: one Acanthocephala, six Rotifera, and two outgroups (Turbellaria, Gnathostomulida). Analysis of our matrix yielded a single most-parsimonious tree. From our analysis we conclude the following: (1) Class Digononta is paraphyletic; (2) it is still premature to reject rotiferan monophyly; (3) the classification hierarchy that best conforms to this morphologically based, cladistic analysis is similar to several traditional schemes. In spite of these results, it is significant that this analysis yielded a tree that is incongruent with those trees developed from molecular data or by using the principles of evolutionary taxonomy.
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  • 13
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 9-14 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: taxonomy ; evaluation ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Results are presented of a historical analysis of taxonomic research on Rotifera, as reflected by the case of α-taxonomy of Lecanidae and Dicranophoridae. The number of available names established, as well as the fraction presently considered valid are counted per decade. Two peak periods in taxonomic research are revealed, viz. a minor one in the last decades of the 19th century, and a major one in the 1920s–1930s. Especially work published during the second period contains a high proportion of names that are currently considered valid. The second half of the 20th century witnessed a decrease in quantity, but also in quality of taxonomic research. The basic cause for this is probably the typological approach to a group exhibiting high intraspecific morphological variability, but also poor taxonomic education, as reflected by a high incidence of insufficient descriptions, and poor knowledge of the rules governing zoological nomenclature, are of incisive importance.
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  • 14
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 277-281 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Anabaena ; Cladocera ; cyanobacteria ; Daphnia ; nucleosides ; Rotifera ; Synchaeta ; toxicity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The cyanobacterium Anabaena affinis contains two nucleosides responsible for its toxicity: 9-deazaadenosine 5′-α-D-glucopyranoside (compound 1) and 9-deazaadenosine (compound 2). As expected, a strain of Daphnia pulex inhibited by A. affinis also was inhibited by these nucleosides. Surprisingly, however, a strain of D. pulex coexisting with A. affinis, and not inhibited by it, was equally or more inhibited by the nucleosides. LC{50} values for compounds 1 and 2 were, respectively, 1.33 and 0.56 μg ml-1 for the former D. pulex and 0.79 and 0.54 μg ml-1 for the latter. The resistant D. pulex, which benefits from the ingestion of A. affinis, may have evolved a mechanism to detoxify the nucleosides in its intestine. In contrast, Synchaeta pectinata, which is unaffected by A. affinis, was not inhibited by the nucleosides. High concentrations of compounds 1 and 2 (3.6 and 2.2 μg ml-1, respectively) reduced neither survivorship nor fecundity. The resistance of this rotifer to the dissolved nucleosides may be due to its inability to absorb them across its surface membranes, to its inability to metabolize them into more toxic compounds, or to its lack of a receptor for them. An evolved resistance seems unlikely, as S. pectinata probably does not ingest A. affinis. The effect of A. affinis on natural zooplankton communities should be very different from that of strains of Anabaena flos-aquae producing the alkaloid, anatoxin-a. The A. affinis should be ingested by many cladocerans but not rotifers, and it contains toxins which inhibit cladocerans but not S. pectinata and perhaps other rotifers. The A. flos-aquae is ingested by rotifers as well as cladocerans, and its toxin inhibits both rotifers and cladocerans.
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  • 15
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Keratella cochlearis ; morphological variation ; food resources
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Morphological variation of Keratella cochlearis was studied during a spring-summer period in a small Andean lake. Morphometry was studied in relation to temperature, food resources, cladoceran competitors and invertebrate predators. Three different morphs were recorded. We observed lack of allometric growth of the posterior spine. Absence of allometric growth could be related with the low density of a predaceous water mite and the small size of the cladocerans present in the lake. Fluctuations in lorica length and width were negatively correlated with temperature and algal biovolume. We discuss the benefits of this morphological response of Keratella in relation to environmental conditions.
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  • 16
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 259-265 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; species composition ; La Plata estuary basin ; salinity ; river
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The rotifer fauna of the river Samborombón and its tributaries (La Plata river basin) was analysed, and 47 species of monogonont rotifers were identified. Results indicate that differences in salinity and ion composition between waters of the main river and that of its tributaries account for differences in the species composition.
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  • 17
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 301-310 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Keratella cochlearis ; egg size variation ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The volume of a single amictic egg of Keratella cochlearis can vary between 32 000 and 132 000 μm3. Much of this variation is related to the size of the female laying the egg. When compared to populations in Europe, those in the Southern Hemisphere (Southern Africa and New Zealand) show a smaller increase in egg volume per unit increase in lorica length. Both lorica length and egg volume show a strong negative correlation with temperature. At high temperatures the females are smaller and they lay smaller eggs, but there are differences between populations in different lakes. In oligotrophic and high altitude lakes there is less variation than in lowland eutrophic lakes.
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  • 18
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 317-320 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; bdelloids ; egg volume ; RES ; trade-off ; fecundity ; recovery
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Egg volumes or relative egg size (RES) of seven bdelloid species were plotted against life-history traits, and recovery rates from 7-day desiccation periods to find evidence for the costs and benefits of producing a few big, or many small eggs. Increased RES of bdelloids is correlated with decreased fecundity and longevity, increased age at maturity, increased egg developmental time and increased recovery from desiccation for both embryos and adults. The production of large eggs represents a cost for the bdelloid rotifer, which, at first sight, does not receive compensating advantages. This paradox, however, is only superficial, as it is suggested that an increase of recovery and, in particular, increased viability of late embryos compensates for the loss of fitness related to the production of large eggs.
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  • 19
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 409-419 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Cladocera ; escape behavior ; food level ; interference competition ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We tested the hypothesis that evasive movements by Hexarthra mira reduce adverse effects of interference competition with cladocerans permitting coexistence. To do this we studied the population growth of Hexarthra mira and two non-evasive Brachionus species in the presence of one of either two cladocerans (Daphnia similoides, Ceriodaphnia cornuta) at three food (Chlorella) levels (0.5, 2 and 4 × 106 cells ml-1) at 25°C. The non-evasive, but larger-sized B. calyciflorus was suppressed by D. similoides at all food levels tested, and by C. cornuta at high food levels only. The smaller B. angularis showed similar trends with D. similoides, but with C. cornuta it persisted and increased in population size at the medium and high food levels. Hexarthra was able to coexist with both the cladocerans regardless of food level. However, population growth rate of Hexarthra was affected significantly in presence of D. similoides, but not in the presence of C. cornuta. We suggest that evasive behavior of Hexarthra helps it coexist with large cladocerans by reducing the frequency of its being drawn into their branchial chambers.
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  • 20
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 131-134 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: SEM ; Rotifera ; methodology ; anesthesia ; deciliation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The scanning electron microscope (SEM) is a powerful tool to observe any surface at the ultrastructural level. During the last 15 years, I developed techniques to process rotifer specimens for SEM observation, in order to obtain images of preserved specimens that simulate their natural appearance. A characteristic feature in Rotifera is the rotatory apparatus (corona) and SEM is appropriate for studying its organization. The organization of the corona is better understood if the rotatory apparatus can be examined after the cilia have been removed. A method to prepare the rotifers for observation by SEM is presented.
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  • 21
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 23-26 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Lecane ; Songkhla province ; Thailand
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Eighteen freshwater bodies in Songkhla Province, southern Thailand were investigated for rotifers of the genus Lecane. A total of 23 species were identified. The majority of species found were cosmopolitan (43%) or tropicopolitan (39%). The rest were oriental (9%) and palaeotropical (9%). The most common species was L. bulla (61% of the plankton samples taken), while L. aculeata, L. arcula, L. blachei, L. stenroosi and L. tenuiseta were rare (only found once). The greatest species diversity was found in Khlong-Hla reservoir (14 species).
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  • 22
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 47-54 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Mexico ; Rotifera ; new record ; taxonomy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A survey of rotifers from a small pond (less than 2 ha in area and 3 m deep), located at Kilometer 28 in the federal highway Ixtlahuaca-Jilotepec (19° 49′ 13″ N, 99° 42′ 22″ W) at an altitude of 2503 m above sea level, resulted in a total of 78 species. From these, 20 are new records for Mexico. This study confirms the presence of some of the rotifer species listed only in earlier studies. Comments on some species are made from a zoogeographical point of view.
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  • 23
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 39-46 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; floodplain ; ephemeral waters ; species diversity ; habitat partitioning ; opportunism ; food webs ; predation ; Copepoda
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Spring surveys of 112 temporary floodplain waters on River Murray tributaries demonstrated a heterogeneous habitat series, with ca. 500 species of microfauna encountered. Rotifers comprised the most diverse group (〉250 taxa), however mean diversity was low (10.93 ± 7.5), in part reflecting predation by copepods and macroinvertebrates. Notably, only 10 rotifer species could be considered widespread in the study area. Ephemeral pool microfaunal communities were distinct from those of adjacent permanent billabongs; their community variability is seen as a function of, or response to, habitat heterogeneity. The significance of high species diversity in ephemeral waters is considered in the context of age of the Murray-Darling Basin, which has persisted in its present location since the breakup of Gondwana, 〉65 MY BP.
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  • 24
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 495-498 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Brachionus ; probiotic materials ; ecosystem ; Uchishiro organisms
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We adapted a probiotic culture system originally developed for domestic animals and fish for the intensive culture of rotifers. In this modification, a crude starter fluid was made by incubating a mixture of some 40 species of bacteria (so-called Uchishiro Microorganisms) with the by-products of other food-related materials. The probiotic culture medium (PCM) was then completed by incubation of 50 g of starter fluid (25 °C) for 3–4 days in 1 L of 50% sea water with strong aeration. After processing, the medium may be used as food for the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis. We determined the optimal levels for feeding B. plicatilis cultures by providing a starter culture of 100 rotifers different concentrations of PCM and monitoring their population growth over five days. The highest population density of B. plicatilis (351 ind ml-1) was achieved from a mixture of 20 ml PCM per 1 L rotifer water. From these experiments, we conclude that PCM is useful as food for rotifer culture if it is supplied at a satisfactory concentration.
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  • 25
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 327-331 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Bdelloidea ; anhydrobiosis ; extraction method ; humidity ; oxygen
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Naturally dried lichens and mushrooms were collected, stored at various relative humidities and temperatures either under air or argon, and extracted in a 0.2 M sucrose solution to determine the long-term survival of resident bdelloid rotifers. Survivorship of rotifers in samples kept at 21 °C for 8 months declined at both 〈 1% and 76% humidities, but remained the same as the starting levels at 23% and 43% humidities. Lowering the temperature to 4 °C improved survival at both 〈 1% and 76% humidities; at -20 °C and 〈1% humidity, survivorship of rotifers did not decline for up to 18 months. Storage at 21 °C under argon gas improved survival of bdelloids at 〈1% humidity, but not at 76% humidity. These results suggest that several processes, including oxidation reactions, may be partly responsible for death of anhydrobiotic bdelloids. To facilitate taxonomic work it is recommended that naturally dried samples containing bdelloids be stored over a desiccant at temperatures below 0 °C until they are to be rehydrated.
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  • 26
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Bütgenbach lake ; water quality ; bioindicator(s) ; biomonitoring ; Rotifera ; ecotoxicity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Results are presented on a study of the zooplankton of Bütgenbach reservoir and from the Warche and Holzwarche rivers which feed the reservoir (March and October 1996). The zooplankton was dominated by rotifers in spring and by crustaceans (cladocerans and copepods) in summer and autumn. A temperature gradient developed during summer and a drastic depletion of oxygen and increase in ammonia concentrations was observed below 7 m depth. The water quality of the River Warche was compared upstream and downstream of the lake using bioindication by rotifers and by reproduction ecotoxicological tests on Brachionus calyciflorus on the other hand. The bioindicators reveal an overall improvement in water quality of the Warche downstream of the reservoir, whereas the toxicity assays show a decline in water quality downstream of the lake during the stratification period, due to the release of hypolimnetic water from the dam. So, under special conditions, ecotoxicity assays appear to be more sensitive than bioindication using rotifers saprobic valences.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Acanthocephala ; aschelminthes ; cladistics ; evolution ; Gnathostomulida ; phylogeny ; pseudocoelomates ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract We investigated phylogenetic relationships of phylum Rotifera using cladistic analysis to uncover all most-parsimonious trees from a data set comprising 60 morphological characters of nine taxa: one Acanthocephala, six Rotifera, and two outgroups (Turbellaria, Gnathostomulida). Analysis of our matrix yielded a single most-parsimonious tree. From our analysis we conclude the following: (1) Class Digononta is paraphyletic; (2) it is still premature to reject rotiferan monophyly; (3) the classification hierarchy that best conforms to this morphologically based, cladistic analysis is similar to several traditional schemes. In spite of these results, it is significant that this analysis yielded a tree that is incongruent with those trees developed from molecular data or by using the principles of evolutionary taxonomy.
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  • 28
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 301-310 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Keratella cochlearis ; egg size variation ; Rotifera
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The volume of a single amictic egg of Keratella cochlearis can vary between 32 000 and 132 000 μm3. Much of this variation is related to the size of the female laying the egg. When compared to populations in Europe, those in the Southern Hemisphere (Southern Africa and New Zealand) show a smaller increase in egg volume per unit increase in lorica length. Both lorica length and egg volume show a strong negative correlation with temperature. At high temperatures the females are smaller and they lay smaller eggs, but there are differences between populations in different lakes. In oligotrophic and high altitude lakes there is less variation than in lowland eutrophic lakes.
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  • 29
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 9-14 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: taxonomy ; evaluation ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Results are presented of a historical analysis of taxonomic research on Rotifera, as reflected by the case of α-taxonomy of Lecanidae and Dicranophoridae. The number of available names established, as well as the fraction presently considered valid are counted per decade. Two peak periods in taxonomic research are revealed, viz. a minor one in the last decades of the 19th century, and a major one in the 1920s–1930s. Especially work published during the second period contains a high proportion of names that are currently considered valid. The second half of the 20th century witnessed a decrease in quantity, but also in quality of taxonomic research. The basic cause for this is probably the typological approach to a group exhibiting high intraspecific morphological variability, but also poor taxonomic education, as reflected by a high incidence of insufficient descriptions, and poor knowledge of the rules governing zoological nomenclature, are of incisive importance.
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  • 30
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 277-281 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Anabaena ; Cladocera ; cyanobacteria ; Daphnia ; nucleosides ; Rotifera ; Synchaeta ; toxicity
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The cyanobacterium Anabaena affinis contains two nucleosides responsible for its toxicity: 9-deazaadenosine 5′-α-D-glucopyranoside (compound 1) and 9-deazaadenosine (compound 2). As expected, a strain of Daphnia pulex inhibited by A. affinis also was inhibited by these nucleosides. Surprisingly, however, a strain of D. pulex coexisting with A. affinis, and not inhibited by it, was equally or more inhibited by the nucleosides. LC{50} values for compounds 1 and 2 were, respectively, 1.33 and 0.56 μg ml-1 for the former D. pulex and 0.79 and 0.54 μg ml-1 for the latter. The resistant D. pulex, which benefits from the ingestion of A. affinis, may have evolved a mechanism to detoxify the nucleosides in its intestine. In contrast, Synchaeta pectinata, which is unaffected by A. affinis, was not inhibited by the nucleosides. High concentrations of compounds 1 and 2 (3.6 and 2.2 μg ml-1, respectively) reduced neither survivorship nor fecundity. The resistance of this rotifer to the dissolved nucleosides may be due to its inability to absorb them across its surface membranes, to its inability to metabolize them into more toxic compounds, or to its lack of a receptor for them. An evolved resistance seems unlikely, as S. pectinata probably does not ingest A. affinis. The effect of A. affinis on natural zooplankton communities should be very different from that of strains of Anabaena flos-aquae producing the alkaloid, anatoxin-a. The A. affinis should be ingested by many cladocerans but not rotifers, and it contains toxins which inhibit cladocerans but not S. pectinata and perhaps other rotifers. The A. flos-aquae is ingested by rotifers as well as cladocerans, and its toxin inhibits both rotifers and cladocerans.
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  • 31
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 79-82 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; north and northwest Russia ; biogeography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The rotifer fauna (about 460 species) of different waterbodies of the north and northwest of Russia is documented in the present thorough review of published and unpublished data. The biogeography of this fauna is discussed.
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  • 32
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 231-240 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; interstitial ; hyporheos ; psammon ; bed sediments
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Rotifers have long been known to inhabit interstitial sediments, thus confirming the high species richness of the group in a variety of habitats. This paper reviews the ecological role of rotifers within the interstitial environment (e.g. hyporheos, psammon, bed sediments) in lakes and running waters. Population densities, assemblage structure, patterns of colonization and drift are examined within riverine ecosystems.
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  • 33
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 251-257 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; River Thames ; Chlorophyll a
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract More than 30 species of rotifer were recorded in the River Thames between Inglesham and Reading from April to October, 1996. Seven of these were relatively abundant. These were Keratella cochlearis (Gosse), Synchaeta oblonga (Müller), Polyarthra dolichoptera Idelson, Keratella quadrata (Müller), Brachionus angularis Gosse, Euchlanis dilatata Ehrenberg and Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas. In early spring, there was little variation in rotifer density along the river, but a marked downstream increase in abundance developed later in the year. Mean rotifer densities ranged from 24 ind. l-1 at the upstream site to 700 ind. l-1 at the most downstream site. A maximum total rotifer density of 4160 ind. l-1 was recorded at Reading on 29 July 1996. In general, the downstream increase in rotifer abundance seemed to parallel similar increases in chlorophyll a concentration in the river water. Losses due to invertebrate predation were probably low, but fish gut analyses from an earlier study had suggested that rotifers may be an important food source for larval fish. Throughout the study, rotifer samples were collected and prepared for counting by two different methods. The results show that estimates of rotifer density may be significantly affected by sampling method.
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  • 34
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: reservoir ; Rotifera ; spatial distribution ; temporal variation ; turbidity
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    Notes: Abstract In reservoirs physical horizontal gradients may affect zooplankton distributions as well as the biotic interactions that potentially regulate zooplankton abundance and species composition. We examined patterns of rotifer abundance and population dynamics along a turbidity gradient over a 4-year period in an Ohio reservoir. To analyze the effect of turbidity on rotifer populations we compared rotifer abundance patterns, species composition, birth and death rates at two sites with high turbidity (river site) and low turbidity (dam site) conditions. Because of the potentially important biotic interaction between rotifers and cladocerans, we also compared cladoceran abundance patterns and species composition. Our results suggest no effect of turbidity on rotifers in Acton Lake. Rotifer and cladoceran abundance patterns were similar at low and high turbidity sites. Similarity indices revealed few differences in rotifer and cladoceran species composition between sites. Rotifer birth and death rates were also similar at low and high turbidity sites. In contrast to these homogeneous spatial patterns, among year comparisons indicate high temporal variability in all parameters measured. Mean rotifer densities were similar from 1993 to 1995, but in 1996 density increased 4-fold. Rotifer species assemblages were dominated by Brachionus spp. from 1993 to 1995, while Keratella cochlearis and Polyarthra spp. were numerically dominant in 1996. Mean cladoceran density also increased in 1996 compared to previous years. Cladoceran species composition was dominated by Diaphanosoma birgei from 1993 to 1995, while Daphnia parvula and Bosmina longirostris dominated the 1996 cladoceran community. Comparison of rotifer population parameters in years of contrasting D. parvula abundance suggests that exploitative competition may be an important mechanism regulating rotifer communities in Acton Lake. Interannual variation in Daphnia abundance may in turn be controlled by variation in fish biomass.
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  • 35
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 15-21 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; zooplankton ; dispersal ; colonization ; wind ; rain ; waterfowl
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Zooplankton, and especially rotifers, have long been thought to be readily dispersed by wind, rain and animals (especially waterfowl). Given that premise, local processes (tolerance to abiotic conditions, biotic interactions) have been the main focus of ecological studies. We tested the premise of high dispersal rates by incubating particulates collected with windsocks and rain samplers at two sites over 1 year. The sites were 80 km apart and differed in proximity to water and surrounding terrain. We also incubated fecal material of wild ducks. Pond sediments were identically incubated as a test of incubation method. Only bdelloid rotifers were collected in wind samples, and only four rotifer species were collected in rain samples: Lecane leontina, Lecane closterocerca, Keratella cochlearis, and a bdelloid. No metazoans were found in incubated duck feces, yet incubated pond sediments yielded 11 rotifer, one copepod, four cladoceran, and three ostracod species. Our results do not support the premise of readily dispersed zooplankton. If zooplankton dispersal is infrequent and limited to few species, a series of other questions should be addressed on processes regulating zooplankton population dynamics and community composition.
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 47-54 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Mexico ; Rotifera ; new record ; taxonomy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A survey of rotifers from a small pond (less than 2 ha in area and 3 m deep), located at Kilometer 28 in the federal highway Ixtlahuaca-Jilotepec (19° 49′ 13″ N, 99° 42′ 22″ W) at an altitude of 2503 m above sea level, resulted in a total of 78 species. From these, 20 are new records for Mexico. This study confirms the presence of some of the rotifer species listed only in earlier studies. Comments on some species are made from a zoogeographical point of view.
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 27-33 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; biodiversity ; floodplain ; taxonomy ; Thailand
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A survey of 11 freshwater habitats in the floodplain of the River Nan, northern Thailand was carried out during April and September 1996. The rotifer samples were collected qualitatively from paddy fields, ponds, canals and reservoirs, using a 60 μm mesh net. One hundred and eighteen species were identified, four (Lepadella quinquecostata (Lucks), Macrochaetus danneeli Koste & Shiel, Testudinella ahlstromi Hauer and T greeni Koste) of which are new to Thailand and one (L. quinquecostata) is new to Asia. The numbers of species found in two localities are relatively high, with 86 and 73 rotifer taxa. Most of the species recorded are common, cosmopolitan or pantropical and warm-stenotherms. The occurrence of a species previously considered endemic to Australia, M. danneeli provides more evidence illustrating a relation between the rotifer faunas of southeast Asia and Australia. Comments are presented on some insufficiently known taxa in particular on the new records for Thailand.
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  • 38
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; streams ; forest and agricultural areas ; species diversity
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The influence of land-use patterns on rotifer communities of streams in Masurian Lake District, Poland, was examined. Four streams in a forest–marsh area, two in forest–meadows, and two streams in agricultural areas were sampled monthly from March 1995 to October 1996. In all 41 genera and 139 species (i.e. ca. 30% of all rotifer species reported in Poland) were collected and identified, four of these are new to Poland. Rotifer numbers in the forest–marsh streams were 2 times higher than in forest–meadow streams and 10 times higher than in the agricultural streams. The forest streams also had higher numbers of species, both in the total number recorded in particular streams (74 in forest–marsh, 53 in forest–meadow, and 27 in agricultural ones), as well as the mean number of species recorded in one sample (17, 11, and 5 species, respectively). The values of Shannon's diversity index were markedly higher in the forest–marsh and forest–meadow (2.42 and 2.49, respectively) streams than streams from agricultural areas (1.49). The streams differed also in their dominant species. The forest–marsh stations were dominated by planktonic rotifers, whereas littoral-planktonic species dominated in streams in the forest–meadow area, and littoral species were most abundant in agricultural areas.
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  • 39
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; microplankton ; arctic ; Alaska
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Growing interest in the development of mineral and recreational resources, along with the recognition that arctic ecosystems may be among those most affected by global change, has stimulated the study of arctic systems in recent decades. These have included studies of rotifers. Two approaches have generally been pursued: taxonomic studies to determine the number and species of individuals, and ecological studies that have attempted to determine the trophic relationships between rotifers and other microorganisms in aquatic ecosystems. Results from studies at the Arctic Long Term Ecological Research Site in Alaska, USA are reviewed and the microbial food web is described based on empirical and literature data. Arctic systems are sites of rich opportunity for further studies, especially those which can integrate taxonomic and ecological aspects.
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  • 40
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 161-170 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; vertical distribution ; temperature ; oxygen ; diversity ; PCA ; karstic lake
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The main source of variation of rotifer species distributions in lake Arcas-2, a small karstic lake near Cuenca (Spain), was explored by means of principal components factor (PCA) and canonical correlation (CCA) analyses. PCA was performed using rotifer densities and CCA using rotifer densities plus physical and chemical parameters. Factor 1 of PCA separated summer species from winter–spring species and Factor 2 accounted for the variation in the vertical profile. Three summer species with different food habits (Polyarthra dolichoptera, Hexarthra mira and Asplanchna girodi) were grouped together at the positive end of Factor 1, while Factor 2 separated the two hypolimnetic species (Filinia hofmanni and Anuraeopsis fissa) from the rest. The relative position of rotifer species in the space determined by the CCA was roughly the same. The most significant environmental factors that became paired with rotifer distribution in the CCA were temperature and oxygen, and parameters related to water inflow. Segregation of filter-feeding species in the spatio–temporal subenvironments is clearly shown by the multivariate analysis. The low diversity of rotifer species found in Lake Arcas-2 is attributed to the reduced dimensions of the lake and its morphology. This lake resembles a sinkhole with an abruptly sloping shoreline and poor development of the littoral zone. This morphology favors a strong oxygen stratification. Since midsummer the oxic–anoxic boundary is located in the upper metalimnion, the vertical structure of the oxygenated water column is simplified. This low rotifer diversity contrasts with a high ciliate diversity in the anoxic waters.
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 349-353 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: competition ; threshold food level ; Rotifera ; temperature ; Brachionus ; Synchaeta
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The numerical response of populations to different food concentrations in an important parameter to be determined for a mechanistic approach to interspecific competition. Theory predicts that the species with the lowest food level (TFL) should always be the superior competitor if only one food source is offered. However, TFLs are not species specific constants but may change along environmental gradients such as food size or temperature. The hypothesis that temperature differentially affects the TFLs of three planktonic rotifers (Asplanchna priodonta, Brachionus calyciflorus and Synchaeta pectinata) was tested in laboratory experiments. Numerical responses were assessed for all three rotifers at 12, 16, 20, 24 and 28°C with Cryptomonas erosa as food alga. Growth rates of all three rotifers at high food concentrations (1 mg C l-1) increased as temperature increased until the limits of thermal tolerance were reached. This increase was very pronounced for Brachionus, but less for Synchaeta which already had relatively high growth rates at 12°C. Along the temperature gradient, the TFLs of Synchaeta increased from 0.074 to 0.66 mg C l-1, whereas those of Asplanchna and Brachionus stayed relatively constant at 0.3 and 0.2 mg C l-1, respectively. Hence, the zero net growth isocline (ZNGI) of Synchaeta crossed those of Brachionus and Asplanchna at 16 and 20.5°C, respectively. The results suggest that Synchaeta is better adapted to low temperatures than the other two rotifers and should be the superior competitor below 16°C.
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  • 42
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 333-340 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Brachionus rotundiformis ; morphology ; amphoteric females ; population density
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In 1933 a connection was formed between the Black Sea and Lake Palaeostomi (Georgia) after which the latter became a brackish-water lake with water salinity up to 13{‰}. Water salinity is variable, depending first of all on the direction and strength of the wind. Brachionus rotundiformis (Tschugunoff) (with 20% or more of total zooplankton abundance) was the dominant zooplankton species in the samples collected in 1977 (July, Aug) and 1996 (July) from this lake. The morphology and ratio of physiological types of female and the population density of dominant species were studied. The lorica length of females was 105–250 μm, its widest part 95–250 μm. The average abundance fluctuated between 5 and 2,600 × 103 ind m-3. A positive correlation was revealed between the occurrence of B. rotundiformis and water salinity (r= 0.7 P 〈 0.0001). B. rotundiformis formed 84% of the abundance of rotifers and 49% of the numbers of total zooplankton. Several types of egg bearing female were detected. The proportions of females with egg types (M + F), (F + M) and (D/F) were 0.13, 0 and 0.01% in 1977 and 0.14, 0.01 and 0.01% in 1996, respectively.
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  • 43
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 495-498 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Brachionus ; probiotic materials ; ecosystem ; Uchishiro organisms
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We adapted a probiotic culture system originally developed for domestic animals and fish for the intensive culture of rotifers. In this modification, a crude starter fluid was made by incubating a mixture of some 40 species of bacteria (so-called Uchishiro Microorganisms) with the by-products of other food-related materials. The probiotic culture medium (PCM) was then completed by incubation of 50 g of starter fluid (25 °C) for 3–4 days in 1 L of 50% sea water with strong aeration. After processing, the medium may be used as food for the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis. We determined the optimal levels for feeding B. plicatilis cultures by providing a starter culture of 100 rotifers different concentrations of PCM and monitoring their population growth over five days. The highest population density of B. plicatilis (351 ind ml-1) was achieved from a mixture of 20 ml PCM per 1 L rotifer water. From these experiments, we conclude that PCM is useful as food for rotifer culture if it is supplied at a satisfactory concentration.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; semicontinuous culture ; dried microalgae ; Brachionus
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    Notes: Abstract In the present study we examined the effect of food ration and individual density at the time of starting the harvesting stage, in determining the demographic parameters in a semicontinuous culture of the rotifers Brachionus plicatilis and B. rotundiformis fed freeze dried Nannochloropsis oculata. Three daily food rations (25, 50 and 100 mg 1-1) and three rotifer densities (250, 500 and 1000 rotifers ml-1) have been tested, in trying to maintain a constant availability of microalgal cells of 100 ng per individual. Results showed that with 10% daily dilution, the mean rotifer density during the steady state remained at values similar to those pre-fixed at the beginning of the harvesting. The production (rotifers 1-1 d-1) increased with the food ration, but the system efficiency (mg-rotifers produced per mg-microalgae) was the same irrespective of the ration.
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  • 45
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; bdelloid ; monogonont ; genome size ; DNA hydridization
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Genome size may be determined as the mass of genomic DNA per copy of a given sequence, multiplied by the number of copies of that sequence in the genome. Practical application of this relationship may be made by hybridizing a radiolabeled cloned segment of the genome to a known number of copies of the segment and to a known mass of genomic DNA separately immobilized on the same membrane. The ratio of the hybridization intensity per copy of the segment to the hybridization intensity per unit mass of genomic DNA is then taken to be the mass of genomic DNA per hybridizing sequence present in the genome. This ratio multiplied by the number of hybridizing sequences in the genome, determined by other means, is taken as the genome size. Employing this procedure with segments of the hsp82 heat shock gene cloned from the monogonont rotifer B. plicatilis and from the bdelloid rotifers P. roseola and H. constricta, we estimate their genome sizes as 0.7, 2.2 and 1.0 pg, respectively.
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  • 46
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 373-384 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; zooplankton ; cyclical parthenogens ; coastal lagoons ; environmental heterogeneity ; allozymes ; mating behavior ; sexual reproduction ; speciation ; biodiversity ; seasonal specialization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we review previous studies on sympatric Brachionus populations in Torreblanca Marsh as a model of evolutionary and ecological relationships between closely related species. The marsh is a wetland on the Mediterranean coast of Spain with high spatial and temporal heterogeneity. Allozyme and morphometric analysis showed that Brachionus group plicatilis (formerly, Brachionus plicatilis and currently split into B. plicatilis and B. rotundiformis) was composed of three groups of genotypes with no evidence of gene flow between them (B. plicatilis, B. rotundiformis SM and B. rotundiformis SS). Correlations between seasonal and spatial distributions, on one hand, and temperature and salinity, on the other hand, were consistent with the results of experimental studies on population dynamics. Accordingly, B. plicatilis is a euryhaline, low temperature group; B. rotundiformis SM is adapted to high temperature and low salinity conditions; and B. rotundiformis SS is adapted to high temperature and high salinity conditions. The groups had different mictic responses to density, salinity and temperature, which can be explained to some extent as an adaptive escape response, given their different ecological preferences. These differences imply a partial ecological barrier to male–female encounter between groups. Mating experiments showed that most copulations occurred within a group. B. plicatilis has a mating recognition system different from those of either B. rotundiformis SM or SS, whereas the two B. rotundiformis groups had partially differentiated mating preferences. Cross-mating experiments performed in the laboratory failed to produce any detectable hybrids. We conclude that three sympatric sibling species inhabit Torreblanca Marsh. The remarkable association between genetic differences among clonal groups and their ecological preferences, mixis response and mating behavior is hypothesized to play a role in stabilizing sympatry, and gives insight into the evolution of genetic divergence and speciation in rotifers.
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  • 47
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    Hydrobiologia 287-388 (1998), S. 135-140 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: nervous system ; morphology ; cathecholamines ; GAIF method ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In 10 rotifer species from the subclasses Archeorotatoria (order Bdelloidea) and Eurotatoria (superorders Gnesiotrocha and Pseudotrocha) three patterns of catecholaminergic neurons are detected, namely: x-shaped, arch-shaped and ring-shaped. These brain complexes are developed independently and in a parallel fashion in different rotifer groups. The number of the brain catecholaminergic neurons varies from 6 to 11, constituting about 3–7% of the total number of the brain cells. The brain neuron pattern demonstrates a distinct bilateral symmetry.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Brachionus ruhens ; Brachionus calyciflorus ; population dynamics ; steady-state growth ; continuous culture ; size distributions
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In laboratory studies, rotifers (Brachionus calyciflorus) were monitored under well-defined environmental conditions at different supply rates of a unicellular algal food (Chlorella vulgaris). Rotifer size frequency distributions are described for conditions of steady-state growth, exponential increase, and starvation. Temporal fluctuations in size-age structure are described for cultures during transient conditions during the approach to a steady state and following step changes in food supply rate. The size structures of the populations displayed definite and reproducible shifts among typical patterns during transient conditions, reflecting the physiological and other dynamic processes that underlay the population dynamics. Size structure probably is a key variable that should be included in models for predicting growth dynamics during transient growth conditions.
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  • 49
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: cladocerans ; Rotifera ; seasonal succession ; diversity ; wind velocity
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract From the end of May to November 1995 the succession of rotifers and cladocerans was investigated in Müggelsee with samples taken twice a week. Keratella cochlearis was the only rotifer which was found on every sampling day and this species also showed the highest abundances. During summer, when frequencies of strong wind events were low and water was strongly stratified, three small cladocerans were dominant (Daphnia cucullata, Chydorus sphaericus, Eubosmina coregoni). Food supply was the main limiting factor for Keratella spp. and Synchaeta spp. In autumn, however, when the intervals between strong winds were shorter, rotifers with shorter periods for population development prospered. Zooplankton diversity first increased and subsequently decreased after disturbances. The results do not support the intermediate disturbance hypothesis in its present formulation.
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  • 50
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; community ; acidification ; whole-lake experiments ; Little Rock Lake ; Wisconsin
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Little Rock Lake, Wisconsin, U.S.A. has been the site of a whole-ecosystem experiment since 1983. It was divided into a treatment basin that was acidified in three, two-year stages and a reference basin. The rotifer community in the treatment basin exhibited a variety of responses to the manipulation. Many species decreased in abundance under reduced pH conditions but other rotifers increased at the same time such that there were ultimately increases with acidification in total rotifer biomass, and quite conspicuously, in the proportion that rotifers comprised of total zooplankton biomass. Ten rotifer species decreased at some stage during the acidification (e.g., Kellicottia longispina, Asplanchna priodonta and Keratella cochlearis) while four species increased dramatically (e.g., Synchaeta sp. and Keratella taurocephala ). Similarity indices and total rotifer biomass differences measured between the two basins exhibited very different temporal patterns of response to acidification. Similarity decreased regularly beginning with the earliest stages of acid additions while biomass was nearly the same between the basins until the late stages of the experiment. Comparisons with other nearby lakes indicate, however, that acid conditions are not the only factors generating among-lake differences in rotifer community characteristics. Changes observed with acidification in Little Rock Lake were such that its total rotifer biomass grew more similar to that in a nearby acidic-bog lake and different from that in a near-neutral-pH lake. At the same time, abundance patterns for individual rotifer species in Little Rock Lake were not particularly similar to those in the other lakes. It appears that, although they are important, acid conditions alone can not account for all observed rotifer community differences among lakes. Higher proportions of rotifer biomass and high populations of K. taurocephala do seem to be common features of many low pH habitats.
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  • 51
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    Hydrobiologia 382 (1998), S. 175-181 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Keratella new species ; taxonomy ; Rotifera ; zoogeography
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Two new morphospecies of Keratella Bory de St. Vincent (Rotifera: Brachionidae) are described from Inner Mongolia, P.R. China. Keratella mongolianum n. sp. is related to K. cruciformis and K. eichwaldi, while Keratella zhugeae n. sp. belongs to the K. quadrata group. K. mongolianum n.sp. is known from a single locality only, but K. zhugeae n.sp. was found in several ponds and had previously been recorded from Tibet. Both taxa are restricted to the eastern Palaearctic region.
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  • 52
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 35-37 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Keratella trapezoida n. sp. ; taxonomy
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A new species of planktonic rotifer, Keratella trapezoida n. sp. is described from the Yangtze River, P.R. China. The new morphospecies is characterized by its four enclosed dorsal median facets, nearly trapezoid shape of the first median facet on dorsal plate, and the caudal median facet with parallel margins and being open posteriorly.
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  • 53
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 79-82 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; north and northwest Russia ; biogeography
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The rotifer fauna (about 460 species) of different waterbodies of the north and northwest of Russia is documented in the present thorough review of published and unpublished data. The biogeography of this fauna is discussed.
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  • 54
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; streams ; forest and agricultural areas ; species diversity
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    Notes: Abstract The influence of land-use patterns on rotifer communities of streams in Masurian Lake District, Poland, was examined. Four streams in a forest–marsh area, two in forest–meadows, and two streams in agricultural areas were sampled monthly from March 1995 to October 1996. In all 41 genera and 139 species (i.e. ca. 30% of all rotifer species reported in Poland) were collected and identified, four of these are new to Poland. Rotifer numbers in the forest–marsh streams were 2 times higher than in forest–meadow streams and 10 times higher than in the agricultural streams. The forest streams also had higher numbers of species, both in the total number recorded in particular streams (74 in forest–marsh, 53 in forest–meadow, and 27 in agricultural ones), as well as the mean number of species recorded in one sample (17, 11, and 5 species, respectively). The values of Shannon's diversity index were markedly higher in the forest–marsh and forest–meadow (2.42 and 2.49, respectively) streams than streams from agricultural areas (1.49). The streams differed also in their dominant species. The forest–marsh stations were dominated by planktonic rotifers, whereas littoral-planktonic species dominated in streams in the forest–meadow area, and littoral species were most abundant in agricultural areas.
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  • 55
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: reservoir ; Rotifera ; spatial distribution ; temporal variation ; turbidity
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In reservoirs physical horizontal gradients may affect zooplankton distributions as well as the biotic interactions that potentially regulate zooplankton abundance and species composition. We examined patterns of rotifer abundance and population dynamics along a turbidity gradient over a 4-year period in an Ohio reservoir. To analyze the effect of turbidity on rotifer populations we compared rotifer abundance patterns, species composition, birth and death rates at two sites with high turbidity (river site) and low turbidity (dam site) conditions. Because of the potentially important biotic interaction between rotifers and cladocerans, we also compared cladoceran abundance patterns and species composition. Our results suggest no effect of turbidity on rotifers in Acton Lake. Rotifer and cladoceran abundance patterns were similar at low and high turbidity sites. Similarity indices revealed few differences in rotifer and cladoceran species composition between sites. Rotifer birth and death rates were also similar at low and high turbidity sites. In contrast to these homogeneous spatial patterns, among year comparisons indicate high temporal variability in all parameters measured. Mean rotifer densities were similar from 1993 to 1995, but in 1996 density increased 4-fold. Rotifer species assemblages were dominated by Brachionus spp. from 1993 to 1995, while Keratella cochlearis and Polyarthra spp. were numerically dominant in 1996. Mean cladoceran density also increased in 1996 compared to previous years. Cladoceran species composition was dominated by Diaphanosoma birgei from 1993 to 1995, while Daphnia parvula and Bosmina longirostris dominated the 1996 cladoceran community. Comparison of rotifer population parameters in years of contrasting D. parvula abundance suggests that exploitative competition may be an important mechanism regulating rotifer communities in Acton Lake. Interannual variation in Daphnia abundance may in turn be controlled by variation in fish biomass.
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  • 56
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Notholca ; taxonomy ; new species ; China
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Notholca dongtingensis n.sp. was found in the second largest lake of China, Dongting Lake. It is related to Notholca labis Gosse, 1887 and N. kozhovi Vassilijewa & Kutikova, 1969. Its main distinguishing taxonomic features are a square-oval lorica, very short anterior spines, anterior lateral spines curving outwards and protrusile posterior margin of the ventral plate.
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  • 57
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; community ; acidification ; whole-lake experiments ; Little Rock Lake ; Wisconsin
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    Notes: Abstract Little Rock Lake, Wisconsin, U.S.A. has been the site of a whole-ecosystem experiment since 1983. It was divided into a treatment basin that was acidified in three, two-year stages and a reference basin. The rotifer community in the treatment basin exhibited a variety of responses to the manipulation. Many species decreased in abundance under reduced pH conditions but other rotifers increased at the same time such that there were ultimately increases with acidification in total rotifer biomass, and quite conspicuously, in the proportion that rotifers comprised of total zooplankton biomass. Ten rotifer species decreased at some stage during the acidification (e.g., Kellicottia longispina, Asplanchna priodonta and Keratella cochlearis) while four species increased dramatically (e.g., Synchaeta sp. and Keratella taurocephala ). Similarity indices and total rotifer biomass differences measured between the two basins exhibited very different temporal patterns of response to acidification. Similarity decreased regularly beginning with the earliest stages of acid additions while biomass was nearly the same between the basins until the late stages of the experiment. Comparisons with other nearby lakes indicate, however, that acid conditions are not the only factors generating among-lake differences in rotifer community characteristics. Changes observed with acidification in Little Rock Lake were such that its total rotifer biomass grew more similar to that in a nearby acidic-bog lake and different from that in a near-neutral-pH lake. At the same time, abundance patterns for individual rotifer species in Little Rock Lake were not particularly similar to those in the other lakes. It appears that, although they are important, acid conditions alone can not account for all observed rotifer community differences among lakes. Higher proportions of rotifer biomass and high populations of K. taurocephala do seem to be common features of many low pH habitats.
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  • 58
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 251-257 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; River Thames ; Chlorophyll a
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract More than 30 species of rotifer were recorded in the River Thames between Inglesham and Reading from April to October, 1996. Seven of these were relatively abundant. These were Keratella cochlearis (Gosse), Synchaeta oblonga (Müller), Polyarthra dolichoptera Idelson, Keratella quadrata (Müller), Brachionus angularis Gosse, Euchlanis dilatata Ehrenberg and Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas. In early spring, there was little variation in rotifer density along the river, but a marked downstream increase in abundance developed later in the year. Mean rotifer densities ranged from 24 ind. l-1 at the upstream site to 700 ind. l-1 at the most downstream site. A maximum total rotifer density of 4160 ind. l-1 was recorded at Reading on 29 July 1996. In general, the downstream increase in rotifer abundance seemed to parallel similar increases in chlorophyll a concentration in the river water. Losses due to invertebrate predation were probably low, but fish gut analyses from an earlier study had suggested that rotifers may be an important food source for larval fish. Throughout the study, rotifer samples were collected and prepared for counting by two different methods. The results show that estimates of rotifer density may be significantly affected by sampling method.
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  • 59
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 231-240 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; interstitial ; hyporheos ; psammon ; bed sediments
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Rotifers have long been known to inhabit interstitial sediments, thus confirming the high species richness of the group in a variety of habitats. This paper reviews the ecological role of rotifers within the interstitial environment (e.g. hyporheos, psammon, bed sediments) in lakes and running waters. Population densities, assemblage structure, patterns of colonization and drift are examined within riverine ecosystems.
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  • 60
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; microplankton ; arctic ; Alaska
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Growing interest in the development of mineral and recreational resources, along with the recognition that arctic ecosystems may be among those most affected by global change, has stimulated the study of arctic systems in recent decades. These have included studies of rotifers. Two approaches have generally been pursued: taxonomic studies to determine the number and species of individuals, and ecological studies that have attempted to determine the trophic relationships between rotifers and other microorganisms in aquatic ecosystems. Results from studies at the Arctic Long Term Ecological Research Site in Alaska, USA are reviewed and the microbial food web is described based on empirical and literature data. Arctic systems are sites of rich opportunity for further studies, especially those which can integrate taxonomic and ecological aspects.
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  • 61
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Keratella cochlearis ; morphological variation ; food resources
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    Notes: Abstract Morphological variation of Keratella cochlearis was studied during a spring-summer period in a small Andean lake. Morphometry was studied in relation to temperature, food resources, cladoceran competitors and invertebrate predators. Three different morphs were recorded. We observed lack of allometric growth of the posterior spine. Absence of allometric growth could be related with the low density of a predaceous water mite and the small size of the cladocerans present in the lake. Fluctuations in lorica length and width were negatively correlated with temperature and algal biovolume. We discuss the benefits of this morphological response of Keratella in relation to environmental conditions.
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  • 62
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 409-419 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Cladocera ; escape behavior ; food level ; interference competition ; Rotifera
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We tested the hypothesis that evasive movements by Hexarthra mira reduce adverse effects of interference competition with cladocerans permitting coexistence. To do this we studied the population growth of Hexarthra mira and two non-evasive Brachionus species in the presence of one of either two cladocerans (Daphnia similoides, Ceriodaphnia cornuta) at three food (Chlorella) levels (0.5, 2 and 4 × 106 cells ml-1) at 25°C. The non-evasive, but larger-sized B. calyciflorus was suppressed by D. similoides at all food levels tested, and by C. cornuta at high food levels only. The smaller B. angularis showed similar trends with D. similoides, but with C. cornuta it persisted and increased in population size at the medium and high food levels. Hexarthra was able to coexist with both the cladocerans regardless of food level. However, population growth rate of Hexarthra was affected significantly in presence of D. similoides, but not in the presence of C. cornuta. We suggest that evasive behavior of Hexarthra helps it coexist with large cladocerans by reducing the frequency of its being drawn into their branchial chambers.
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  • 63
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; bdelloid ; monogonont ; genome size ; DNA hydridization
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Genome size may be determined as the mass of genomic DNA per copy of a given sequence, multiplied by the number of copies of that sequence in the genome. Practical application of this relationship may be made by hybridizing a radiolabeled cloned segment of the genome to a known number of copies of the segment and to a known mass of genomic DNA separately immobilized on the same membrane. The ratio of the hybridization intensity per copy of the segment to the hybridization intensity per unit mass of genomic DNA is then taken to be the mass of genomic DNA per hybridizing sequence present in the genome. This ratio multiplied by the number of hybridizing sequences in the genome, determined by other means, is taken as the genome size. Employing this procedure with segments of the hsp82 heat shock gene cloned from the monogonont rotifer B. plicatilis and from the bdelloid rotifers P. roseola and H. constricta, we estimate their genome sizes as 0.7, 2.2 and 1.0 pg, respectively.
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  • 64
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 373-384 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; zooplankton ; cyclical parthenogens ; coastal lagoons ; environmental heterogeneity ; allozymes ; mating behavior ; sexual reproduction ; speciation ; biodiversity ; seasonal specialization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we review previous studies on sympatric Brachionus populations in Torreblanca Marsh as a model of evolutionary and ecological relationships between closely related species. The marsh is a wetland on the Mediterranean coast of Spain with high spatial and temporal heterogeneity. Allozyme and morphometric analysis showed that Brachionus group plicatilis (formerly, Brachionus plicatilis and currently split into B. plicatilis and B. rotundiformis) was composed of three groups of genotypes with no evidence of gene flow between them (B. plicatilis, B. rotundiformis SM and B. rotundiformis SS). Correlations between seasonal and spatial distributions, on one hand, and temperature and salinity, on the other hand, were consistent with the results of experimental studies on population dynamics. Accordingly, B. plicatilis is a euryhaline, low temperature group; B. rotundiformis SM is adapted to high temperature and low salinity conditions; and B. rotundiformis SS is adapted to high temperature and high salinity conditions. The groups had different mictic responses to density, salinity and temperature, which can be explained to some extent as an adaptive escape response, given their different ecological preferences. These differences imply a partial ecological barrier to male–female encounter between groups. Mating experiments showed that most copulations occurred within a group. B. plicatilis has a mating recognition system different from those of either B. rotundiformis SM or SS, whereas the two B. rotundiformis groups had partially differentiated mating preferences. Cross-mating experiments performed in the laboratory failed to produce any detectable hybrids. We conclude that three sympatric sibling species inhabit Torreblanca Marsh. The remarkable association between genetic differences among clonal groups and their ecological preferences, mixis response and mating behavior is hypothesized to play a role in stabilizing sympatry, and gives insight into the evolution of genetic divergence and speciation in rotifers.
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  • 65
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 15-21 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; zooplankton ; dispersal ; colonization ; wind ; rain ; waterfowl
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Zooplankton, and especially rotifers, have long been thought to be readily dispersed by wind, rain and animals (especially waterfowl). Given that premise, local processes (tolerance to abiotic conditions, biotic interactions) have been the main focus of ecological studies. We tested the premise of high dispersal rates by incubating particulates collected with windsocks and rain samplers at two sites over 1 year. The sites were 80 km apart and differed in proximity to water and surrounding terrain. We also incubated fecal material of wild ducks. Pond sediments were identically incubated as a test of incubation method. Only bdelloid rotifers were collected in wind samples, and only four rotifer species were collected in rain samples: Lecane leontina, Lecane closterocerca, Keratella cochlearis, and a bdelloid. No metazoans were found in incubated duck feces, yet incubated pond sediments yielded 11 rotifer, one copepod, four cladoceran, and three ostracod species. Our results do not support the premise of readily dispersed zooplankton. If zooplankton dispersal is infrequent and limited to few species, a series of other questions should be addressed on processes regulating zooplankton population dynamics and community composition.
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  • 66
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 27-33 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; biodiversity ; floodplain ; taxonomy ; Thailand
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A survey of 11 freshwater habitats in the floodplain of the River Nan, northern Thailand was carried out during April and September 1996. The rotifer samples were collected qualitatively from paddy fields, ponds, canals and reservoirs, using a 60 μm mesh net. One hundred and eighteen species were identified, four (Lepadella quinquecostata (Lucks), Macrochaetus danneeli Koste & Shiel, Testudinella ahlstromi Hauer and T greeni Koste) of which are new to Thailand and one (L. quinquecostata) is new to Asia. The numbers of species found in two localities are relatively high, with 86 and 73 rotifer taxa. Most of the species recorded are common, cosmopolitan or pantropical and warm-stenotherms. The occurrence of a species previously considered endemic to Australia, M. danneeli provides more evidence illustrating a relation between the rotifer faunas of southeast Asia and Australia. Comments are presented on some insufficiently known taxa in particular on the new records for Thailand.
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  • 67
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 171-178 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; redundancy analysis ; reservoir ; bottom-up factors ; top-down factors ; competition ; multidimensional analysis ; time series
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Seasonal changes of the plankton rotifer community in an eutrophic Czech reservoir were evaluated in relation to 46 environmental variables. To do this, data of rotifer abundance from three growing seasons (1993 – 1995) were analyzed. The seasonal dynamics of rotifers in all three years were characterized by two distinctive aspects: (1) the spring peak, with both maximum density and maximum species diversity, was dominated by Keratella cochlearis, K. hiemalis, K. quadrata and Polyarthra dolichoptera; (2) the summer-autumnal peak (or several lower peaks) of about half the intensity of the spring one, was composed mainly of Keratella cochlearis, Trichocerca similis and Polyarthra vulgaris. The separation between these two peaks coincided with the decline of phytoplankton and development of a clear-water phase in this reservoir. In redundancy analysis, species-abundance data for rotifers were related to all measured environmental variables. Date, abundance of Cyclops vicinus, total nitrogen, primary production, surface temperature, and density of heterotrophic nanoflagellates were identified as the most important variables. Partial redundancy analysis was used to assess the significance of pure and date-structured environmental factors influencing rotifers during the season. Date-structured environmental factors (such as physical and chemical variables, food, competition, and predation) significantly affected the rotifer community. This study shows that the rotifers in the reservoir are controlled by both abiotic and biotic factors.
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  • 68
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 161-170 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; vertical distribution ; temperature ; oxygen ; diversity ; PCA ; karstic lake
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The main source of variation of rotifer species distributions in lake Arcas-2, a small karstic lake near Cuenca (Spain), was explored by means of principal components factor (PCA) and canonical correlation (CCA) analyses. PCA was performed using rotifer densities and CCA using rotifer densities plus physical and chemical parameters. Factor 1 of PCA separated summer species from winter–spring species and Factor 2 accounted for the variation in the vertical profile. Three summer species with different food habits (Polyarthra dolichoptera, Hexarthra mira and Asplanchna girodi) were grouped together at the positive end of Factor 1, while Factor 2 separated the two hypolimnetic species (Filinia hofmanni and Anuraeopsis fissa) from the rest. The relative position of rotifer species in the space determined by the CCA was roughly the same. The most significant environmental factors that became paired with rotifer distribution in the CCA were temperature and oxygen, and parameters related to water inflow. Segregation of filter-feeding species in the spatio–temporal subenvironments is clearly shown by the multivariate analysis. The low diversity of rotifer species found in Lake Arcas-2 is attributed to the reduced dimensions of the lake and its morphology. This lake resembles a sinkhole with an abruptly sloping shoreline and poor development of the littoral zone. This morphology favors a strong oxygen stratification. Since midsummer the oxic–anoxic boundary is located in the upper metalimnion, the vertical structure of the oxygenated water column is simplified. This low rotifer diversity contrasts with a high ciliate diversity in the anoxic waters.
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 349-353 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: competition ; threshold food level ; Rotifera ; temperature ; Brachionus ; Synchaeta
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The numerical response of populations to different food concentrations in an important parameter to be determined for a mechanistic approach to interspecific competition. Theory predicts that the species with the lowest food level (TFL) should always be the superior competitor if only one food source is offered. However, TFLs are not species specific constants but may change along environmental gradients such as food size or temperature. The hypothesis that temperature differentially affects the TFLs of three planktonic rotifers (Asplanchna priodonta, Brachionus calyciflorus and Synchaeta pectinata) was tested in laboratory experiments. Numerical responses were assessed for all three rotifers at 12, 16, 20, 24 and 28°C with Cryptomonas erosa as food alga. Growth rates of all three rotifers at high food concentrations (1 mg C l-1) increased as temperature increased until the limits of thermal tolerance were reached. This increase was very pronounced for Brachionus, but less for Synchaeta which already had relatively high growth rates at 12°C. Along the temperature gradient, the TFLs of Synchaeta increased from 0.074 to 0.66 mg C l-1, whereas those of Asplanchna and Brachionus stayed relatively constant at 0.3 and 0.2 mg C l-1, respectively. Hence, the zero net growth isocline (ZNGI) of Synchaeta crossed those of Brachionus and Asplanchna at 16 and 20.5°C, respectively. The results suggest that Synchaeta is better adapted to low temperatures than the other two rotifers and should be the superior competitor below 16°C.
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  • 70
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 267-276 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; chemoreception ; chemical ecology ; sensory ; predation ; mating ; mixis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract One of the primary channels of sensory input for zooplankton are chemical signals. Much zooplankton behavior is triggered by chemical stimuli, including feeding, predator defense, mating, and migration. Chemically regulated zooplankton behavior affects larger scale ecosystem processes like grazing, recruitment and secondary production. Knowledge of how chemicals transmit information about location, food quality, conspecifics, competitors, and predators is critical for understanding how aquatic ecosystems function. This paper reviews the behavioral evidence that planktonic rotifers respond to a variety of chemical stimuli. Although a rich variety of rotifer behaviors are regulated by chemical signals, little progress has been made to isolate and characterize these stimuli. If aquatic ecology is to become a predictive science, knowledge of the mechanisms causing the observed interactions is necessary. Chemical signals need to be isolated, purified, and characterized, and their causal role in regulating population and community processes needs to be demonstrated. Rotifers have chemosensory neurons in their corona and electron microscopy has revealed chemoreceptive pores in the anterior integument of several species. Some rotifers use these chemoreceptors to discriminate food particles based on the flavors on the cell surface. In Asplanchna, prey are discriminated by contact chemoreception. Asplanchna releases a waterborne signal that induces spine formation in several Brachionus species, Keratella cochlearis, K. slacki, and Filinia longisecta. The colonial Sinatherina socialis is defended against fish predation by warts containing unpalatable chemicals that have yet to be identified. Larval settlement in Collotheca gracillipes is determined by the chemistry of aquatic plant surfaces. Larvae prefer the undersurface of leaves where there is a low Ca{++} microhabitat due to photosynthesis. Oviposition in Euchlanis dilatata is restricted to plant surfaces familiar to the maternal female. Hydrogen peroxide and certain prostaglandins stimulate resting egg hatching even in the dark. Sexual reproduction and polymorphism in Asplanchna sieboldi is regulated by dietary tocopherol. A chemical signal that allows assessment of conspecific population density is detected in conditioned media by several rotifer species. Water soluble extracts of Brachionus plicatilis increase mictic female production 1.7 times more than controls. Unknown compounds produced by certain bacteria also increase mixis 4–10 fold over controls. Mate recognition in B. plicatilis is determined by a 29 kD surface glycoprotein called the mate recognition pheromone (MRP). The MRP has been isolated, purified, and a polyclonal antibody against it has been prepared. The structure of the oligosaccharide and protein components of the MRP are currently being characterized. Elucidation of the chemicals regulating rotifer life cycles will make important contributions to the understanding of ecological processes in aquatic communities.
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  • 71
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; semicontinuous culture ; dried microalgae ; Brachionus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In the present study we examined the effect of food ration and individual density at the time of starting the harvesting stage, in determining the demographic parameters in a semicontinuous culture of the rotifers Brachionus plicatilis and B. rotundiformis fed freeze dried Nannochloropsis oculata. Three daily food rations (25, 50 and 100 mg 1-1) and three rotifer densities (250, 500 and 1000 rotifers ml-1) have been tested, in trying to maintain a constant availability of microalgal cells of 100 ng per individual. Results showed that with 10% daily dilution, the mean rotifer density during the steady state remained at values similar to those pre-fixed at the beginning of the harvesting. The production (rotifers 1-1 d-1) increased with the food ration, but the system efficiency (mg-rotifers produced per mg-microalgae) was the same irrespective of the ration.
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  • 72
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 259-265 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; species composition ; La Plata estuary basin ; salinity ; river
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The rotifer fauna of the river Samborombón and its tributaries (La Plata river basin) was analysed, and 47 species of monogonont rotifers were identified. Results indicate that differences in salinity and ion composition between waters of the main river and that of its tributaries account for differences in the species composition.
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  • 73
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 451-457 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: taxonomic resolution ; ecological studies ; flooding ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In many long-term, intensive experimental and field studies there often arises a need to trade off taxonomic resolution for ecological answers. Compounding this problem is a taxonomic impediment, the lack of experienced taxonomists capable of processing large numbers of samples to species resolution, especially in groups such as the Rotifera. This paper has two aims: (1) To investigate the level of taxonomic resolution required to determine the impact of a disturbance, in the form of a flood event; (2) to compare the impact of different taxonomic resolutions in assessing biodiversity. Results suggest both family and generic resolution can be used to determine the impact of a flood event and that these levels have some applicability to biodiversity studies. Relatively inexperienced taxonomists who can identify the common rotifers to generic level, can be relied upon to detect disturbance to community structure but their data become unreliable when assessing biodiversity.
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  • 74
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 117-121 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; trophi ; preparation ; light microscopy ; scanning electron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The methods to prepare rotifer trophi for light and scanning electron microscopy are reviewed, and the rapid method used by the author is described. Rotifers are dissolved in a minimal amount of sodium hypochlorite solution on a coverslip, and serially rinsed in distilled water. The entire procedure is done under a microscope using micropipettes.
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  • 75
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 317-320 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; bdelloids ; egg volume ; RES ; trade-off ; fecundity ; recovery
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Egg volumes or relative egg size (RES) of seven bdelloid species were plotted against life-history traits, and recovery rates from 7-day desiccation periods to find evidence for the costs and benefits of producing a few big, or many small eggs. Increased RES of bdelloids is correlated with decreased fecundity and longevity, increased age at maturity, increased egg developmental time and increased recovery from desiccation for both embryos and adults. The production of large eggs represents a cost for the bdelloid rotifer, which, at first sight, does not receive compensating advantages. This paradox, however, is only superficial, as it is suggested that an increase of recovery and, in particular, increased viability of late embryos compensates for the loss of fitness related to the production of large eggs.
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  • 76
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 135-140 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: nervous system ; morphology ; cathecholamines ; GAIF method ; Rotifera
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In 10 rotifer species from the subclasses Archeorotatoria (order Bdelloidea) and Eurotatoria (superorders Gnesiotrocha and Pseudotrocha) three patterns of catecholaminergic neurons are detected, namely: x-shaped, arch-shaped and ring-shaped. These brain complexes are developed independently and in a parallel fashion in different rotifer groups. The number of the brain catecholaminergic neurons varies from 6 to 11, constituting about 3–7% of the total number of the brain cells. The brain neuron pattern demonstrates a distinct bilateral symmetry.
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  • 77
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: cladocerans ; Rotifera ; seasonal succession ; diversity ; wind velocity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract From the end of May to November 1995 the succession of rotifers and cladocerans was investigated in Müggelsee with samples taken twice a week. Keratella cochlearis was the only rotifer which was found on every sampling day and this species also showed the highest abundances. During summer, when frequencies of strong wind events were low and water was strongly stratified, three small cladocerans were dominant (Daphnia cucullata, Chydorus sphaericus, Eubosmina coregoni). Food supply was the main limiting factor for Keratella spp. and Synchaeta spp. In autumn, however, when the intervals between strong winds were shorter, rotifers with shorter periods for population development prospered. Zooplankton diversity first increased and subsequently decreased after disturbances. The results do not support the intermediate disturbance hypothesis in its present formulation.
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  • 78
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    Hydrobiologia 387-388 (1998), S. 333-340 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Brachionus rotundiformis ; morphology ; amphoteric females ; population density
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In 1933 a connection was formed between the Black Sea and Lake Palaeostomi (Georgia) after which the latter became a brackish-water lake with water salinity up to 13{‰}. Water salinity is variable, depending first of all on the direction and strength of the wind. Brachionus rotundiformis (Tschugunoff) (with 20% or more of total zooplankton abundance) was the dominant zooplankton species in the samples collected in 1977 (July, Aug) and 1996 (July) from this lake. The morphology and ratio of physiological types of female and the population density of dominant species were studied. The lorica length of females was 105–250 μm, its widest part 95–250 μm. The average abundance fluctuated between 5 and 2,600 × 103 ind m-3. A positive correlation was revealed between the occurrence of B. rotundiformis and water salinity (r= 0.7 P 〈 0.0001). B. rotundiformis formed 84% of the abundance of rotifers and 49% of the numbers of total zooplankton. Several types of egg bearing female were detected. The proportions of females with egg types (M + F), (F + M) and (D/F) were 0.13, 0 and 0.01% in 1977 and 0.14, 0.01 and 0.01% in 1996, respectively.
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  • 79
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rotifera ; Brachionus ruhens ; Brachionus calyciflorus ; population dynamics ; steady-state growth ; continuous culture ; size distributions
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In laboratory studies, rotifers (Brachionus calyciflorus) were monitored under well-defined environmental conditions at different supply rates of a unicellular algal food (Chlorella vulgaris). Rotifer size frequency distributions are described for conditions of steady-state growth, exponential increase, and starvation. Temporal fluctuations in size-age structure are described for cultures during transient conditions during the approach to a steady state and following step changes in food supply rate. The size structures of the populations displayed definite and reproducible shifts among typical patterns during transient conditions, reflecting the physiological and other dynamic processes that underlay the population dynamics. Size structure probably is a key variable that should be included in models for predicting growth dynamics during transient growth conditions.
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