# Differentiated fatty acid allocation of Daphnia magna helped to maintain their population under food quality deterioration

**Authors:** Sirui Wang, Zhengwen Liu, Xiaoqi Su, Xiaotong Jin, Hui Jin, Yaling Su, Jianjun Wang, Erik Jeppesen, Xiufeng Zhang, Yali Tang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2025.1544005 · Frontiers in Microbiology · 2025-03-10

## TL;DR

Daphnia magna adjust how they use fatty acids to survive when food quality declines, helping their population persist despite poor nutrition.

## Contribution

The study reveals a novel adaptive strategy of fatty acid allocation in Daphnia magna under deteriorating food quality.

## Key findings

- D. magna showed lower PUFA and carbon turnover when food quality deteriorated.
- Offspring had higher PUFA content than mothers under poor food conditions.
- D. magna switching diets maintained similar population growth rates as those on high-quality food.

## Abstract

Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) are vital to the physiological functioning of crustacean zooplankton. However, cyanobacteria blooms frequently lead to PUFA deficiencies, which poses a substantial challenge to population fitness. Therefore, we hypothesize that D. magna adapt to PUFA-deficient conditions by prioritizing PUFA allocation to somatic growth, and then to offspring during reproduction to ensure population persistence. To test this hypothesis, we applied (compound-specific) 13C labeling to compare the turnover of total carbon and certain groups of fatty acids in Daphnia magna fed with Scenedesmus bijuba for 6 days and then switching to a diet of 13C labeled Microcystis wesenbergii for 6 days (with food quality deterioration) or to a diet of 13C-labeled Scenedesmus (without food quality deterioration), respectively. Fatty acid profiles of D. magna mothers and offspring were also analyzed to reveal their PUFA allocation strategies. Life table parameters from D. magna-feeding Scenedesmus switching to Microcystis were compared with D. magna fed with only Scenedesmus or Microcystis to reveal the effect of PUFA allocation on D. magna performance. Our results showed that with food quality deterioration, D. magna exhibited a significantly lower PUFA and carbon turnover and higher offspring: mother ratios in their PUFA contents. Despite this reduced reproduction, the D. magna switching diets showed no significant different intrinsic increasing rate of populations with those fed only Scenedesmus. Meanwhile, the D. magna switching diets performed significantly better than D. magna fed only Microcystis. These results suggest that differential fatty acid allocation of consumers may serve as an adaptive strategy for population maintenance in food quality deterioration and provide ecological implications with cyanobacterial bloom management and Daphnia reproductive plasticity, which needs further explorations.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** 13C (PubChem CID 105026)
- **Species:** Daphnia magna (taxon 35525), Microcystis wesenbergii (taxon 44823), Scenedesmus (taxon 3087)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cyanobacterial bloom (MESH:D001816)
- **Chemicals:** Fatty acid (MESH:D005227), 13C (MESH:C000615229), PUFA (MESH:D005231), carbon (MESH:D002244)
- **Species:** Daphnia (common water fleas, genus) [taxon 6668], Microcystis wesenbergii (species) [taxon 44823], Daphnia magna (species) [taxon 35525], Scenedesmus (genus) [taxon 3087]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

44 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11931139/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11931139