Cyclomorphosis in Daphnia lumholtzi induced by temperature

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Abstract

1. Cyclomorphosis is a well known phenomenon in Daphnia that involves a regular, seasonal, or induced change in body allometry. Long helmets and tail spines were induced in laboratory cultures of Daphnia lumholtzi with temperature of 31 °C as the proximal cue (temperature of locally occurring peak abundance in Kentucky Lake). The effect was greater in embryos than juveniles or adults exposed to the temperature cue. 2. The temperature cue appears to have a threshold value (animals cultured at 25 or 28 °C did not develop elongated helmets or spines). The helmet and spine length receded both with D. lumholtzi kept at a constant 31 °C temperature and when water temperature was decreased. 3. The induced helmet in this experiment (0.66 mm, 1.0 mm animal) was significantly longer than values reported in the literature for induction by planktivorous fish kairomones (0.25 mm, 1.2 mm animal). The strong response to a proximal cue of temperature may require the second weaker chemical cue for maintenance. It is suggested that a synergistic explanation with two cues may be morel appropriate for cyclomorphosis induction and maintenance in Daphnia lumholtzi that could be tested with further studies.

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Yurista, P. M. (2000). Cyclomorphosis in Daphnia lumholtzi induced by temperature. Freshwater Biology, 43(2), 207–213. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2427.2000.00543.x

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