"People use
water fleas as aquatic 'coal-mine canaries,'" said
Taylor. "They are good indicators of environmental
change."
In stable environments, female
water fleas generally reproduce asexually, essentially cloning
themselves and resulting in populations of females that are practically
impossible to tell apart.
Water flea populations grow much
faster when they reproduce asexually than when they do so sexually,
Taylor explained.
He added that the practice of
rarely producing males has likely been conserved for 100 million years
or more in a large group of freshwater crustaceans.
In the UB experiments, four
distantly related species of water fleas were exposed to methyl
farnesoate (MF), a crustacean juvenile hormone that is known to
determine sex in some species that regularly produce males.
The researchers found that the
MF exposure caused the production of males in different families of
water fleas, despite the fact that they were only distantly related to
each other and despite the fact that laboratory conditions were designed
to be unfavorable to the production of males.
"Because the same MF hormone
affects a broad range of crustaceans, any insecticide that mimics MF
also may affect a large number of species in freshwater communities,"
said Taylor.
"In other words, MF-based
insecticides are not insect-specific, and if you affect a non-target
species that's a major player in these freshwater food webs, then it
will affect things higher up the food chain," he said.
The increased production of
males after exposure to these insecticides could reduce water flea
populations significantly, adversely affecting freshwater fish
populations, he said.
The induction of males in the
lab comes at an important time, Taylor explained, since the Daphnia
genome is expected to be published next year. Taylor is a member of the
consortium based at Indiana University that is working on the genome.
"Breeding studies with both
males and females often are necessary to identify candidate genes
responsible for certain genetic traits," Taylor said. "If we want to
understand, for example, the genetic basis for why some clones of
Daphnia from lakes are more resistant to pollution, then having males
could help to find the genes in the genome."
Male water fleas, Taylor
explained, are assigned more readily to a species than are females, but
males are only rarely produced and for many species, have never been
seen.
"We need to know the species
identities in order to understand how freshwater communities are
changing over time, as a response to climate change, pollution or
invasive species," said Taylor. "We're hoping that by studying the
biology of the rare males, we can learn more about species diversity and
freshwater ecosystem changes."
The male-inducing tool now will
be used to understand water flea species diversity on a global scale.
Co-authors on the paper are
Keonho Kim, doctoral candidate in the UB Department of Biological
Sciences, and Alexey A. Kotov, Ph.D., scientist at the A. N. Severtsov
Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences in
Moscow.
The research was supported by a
grant from the National Science Foundation, "Partnership for Enhancing
Expertise in Taxonomy."
The University at Buffalo is a
premier research-intensive public university, the largest and most
comprehensive campus in the State University of New York.
Source: University at Buffalo
Published on 14th
December 2005