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Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment

Excess fine sediment (particles

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Main Authors: Morwenna Mckenzie, Jennifer Scott, Paul Wood, Kate Mathers
Format: Default Article
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/25428172.v1
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author Morwenna Mckenzie
Jennifer Scott
Paul Wood
Kate Mathers
author_facet Morwenna Mckenzie
Jennifer Scott
Paul Wood
Kate Mathers
author_sort Morwenna Mckenzie (10749141)
collection Figshare
description Excess fine sediment (particles
format Default
Article
id rr-article-25428172
institution Loughborough University
publishDate 2024
record_format Figshare
spelling rr-article-254281722024-03-16T00:00:00Z Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment Morwenna Mckenzie (10749141) Jennifer Scott (637633) Paul Wood (1255125) Kate Mathers (3757717) Ecology Evolutionary biology Zoology Environmental sciences Aquatic invertebrates Ionocytes Osmoregulation Phenotypic plasticity Respiration <ol> <li>Excess fine sediment (particles <2 mm) delivery and deposition in freshwater systems is a significant factor in structuring aquatic communities and populations.</li> <li>Invertebrate gill surfaces can become covered with fine sediment, potentially compromising osmoregulatory function. </li> <li>Ionocytes are specialised structures for osmoregulation found on the tracheal gills of mayflies. The number of cells has been shown to change in order to maintain osmoregulatory demands under environmentally variable conditions. </li> <li>To investigate whether ionocytes vary in response to fine sediment pressure, individuals of <em>Baetis rhodani</em> were collected from two high and low fine sediment cover sites, respectively, in the UK. Tracheal gills were subsequently examined for the number of ionocytes present on the upper and lower gill surfaces, standardised by gill size. </li> <li>Results indicated that the number of ionocytes was significantly higher for mayflies collected from areas with high fine sediment cover. High fine sediment sites were also characterised by lower altitude and dissolved oxygen concentrations. Mayfly gills collected from high sediment cover sites were also significantly larger than those collected from low sediment sites. </li> <li>The results illustrate the potential for mayfly larvae to demonstrate phenotypic plasticity to the pressures associated with fine sediment but that these responses are likely dependent on the composition of fine sediment deposits (organic or mineral) and associated oxygen concentrations.</li> </ol><p></p> 2024-03-16T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/25428172.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Phenotypic_plasticity_of_a_Baetid_mayfly_larvae_i_Baetis_rhodani_i_at_sites_with_high_levels_of_deposited_fine_sediment/25428172 CC BY 4.0
spellingShingle Ecology
Evolutionary biology
Zoology
Environmental sciences
Aquatic invertebrates
Ionocytes
Osmoregulation
Phenotypic plasticity
Respiration
Morwenna Mckenzie
Jennifer Scott
Paul Wood
Kate Mathers
Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
title Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
title_full Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
title_fullStr Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
title_full_unstemmed Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
title_short Phenotypic plasticity of a Baetid mayfly larvae (<i>Baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
title_sort phenotypic plasticity of a baetid mayfly larvae (<i>baetis rhodani</i>) at sites with high levels of deposited fine sediment
topic Ecology
Evolutionary biology
Zoology
Environmental sciences
Aquatic invertebrates
Ionocytes
Osmoregulation
Phenotypic plasticity
Respiration
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/25428172.v1