The objective of this study was to expand the spatial scale of previous experiments on the effects of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) on diel vertical migration (DVM) by freshwater zooplankton. We conducted an in situ mesocosm experiment in highly UVR transparent Lake Giles, Pennsylvania, in which we imposed two treatments: ambient UVR and UVR-shielded. Mesocosms (3440 L, 0.74 m diameter, 8 m deep) were large enough to include a spatial refuge from UVR and permit relatively large-scale DVM. Daphnia catawba adopted a significantly deeper distribution during the day in the ambient UVR treatment compared to the UVR-shielded treatment, but effects of UVR were absent at night. In contrast, DVM by Leptodiaptomus minutus was unaffected by the UVR treatment. In both treatments, Leptodiaptomus minutus were most abundant at the bottom of the mesocosms during the day and exhibited a more uniform distribution across depths at night. These results suggest that UVR, along with temperature, algal resources, and predators, may affect zooplankton DVM in aquatic ecosystems.
We examined the effects of UV radiation (UVR) on metabolic rates of the freshwater cladoceran Daphnia catawba. We exposed D. catawba to UVB for 12 h in a lamp phototron at levels of 2.08 and 4.16 kJ m 22 both with and without concomitant exposure to UVA and visible photorepair radiation (PRR). We also included a group that received PRR only and a dark control group. Respiration rates were measured for 6 h following exposure. Respiration rates increased by 31.8% relative to the dark control at the lowest level of UVB stress (2.08 kJ m 22 UVB with PRR), whereas respiration was inhibited by 70.3% at the highest stress level (4.16 kJ m 22 UVB without PRR). Survival rates in the group that received PRR only and the group exposed to 2.08 kJ m 22 and PRR were not significantly different from that in the control group; however, the survival rate was reduced for all other UVR exposures. We hypothesize that enhanced respiration rates reflect energetic costs related to repair of cellular components damaged by sublethal levels of UVR. Increases in respiration rate of the magnitude we found in our experiment could significantly reduce energetic reserves available for growth and reproduction, especially in cases where these costs are incurred repeatedly during a series of days with high levels of UVR.
In their letter, Lucia Fidhiany and Klaus Winckler (1) raise several concerns with our recent article (2) in Photochemistry and Photohblogy. Several of the comments questioned our treatment of
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