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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 1673

Gunvor Oie and Yngvar Olsen; Influence of rapid changes in salinity and temperature on the mobility of the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis. Hydrobiologia 255/256:81-86, 1993

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The rotifer Brachionus plicatilis can grow in a wide range of salinities and temperatures, but rapid shifts in both salinity and temperature may result in immobilized, non-swimming rotifers. The goal of this study was to examine the effect of perturbations in temperature and salinity on the swimming pattern of the rotifer. Only slight changes in mobility were observed when rotifers were exposed to changes in temperature (from 20 degrees C to 8-30 degrees C) and to an increase in salinity (from 20 0/00 to 30 0/00). When the salinity was reduced to 15 0/00 and 5 0/00, the proportion of mobile rotifers was reduced to 50% and 5%, respectively. The rotifers were throughout more resistant to perturbations in temperature than to those of salinity. Combined temperature and salinity perturbations compared to perturbations in each factor separately suggested a synergetic effect of temperature and salinity on the rotifers locomotion. Transfer from cultivation conditions to low salinity (5 0/00) and high temperature (28 degrees C) resulted in very low percent of mobile rotifers (0-10%). However, if the temperature was reduced to 8 degrees C concomitant with the changes in salinity, the percent of mobile rotifers was 85%. Rotifers use a high share of their metabolic energy for locomotion, and it is therefore not surprising that perturbations in salinity and temperature may result in partial or complete immobilization.