Introduction
Though parasites may constitute a substantial part of total biodiversity and biomass in aquatic ecosystems (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Dobson and Lafferty2006; Kuris et al., Reference Kuris, Hechinger, Shaw, Whitney, Aguirre-Macedo, Boch, Dobson, Dunham, Fredensborg, Huspeni, Lorda, Mababa, Mancini, Mora, Pickering, Talhouk, Torchin and Lafferty2008; Preston et al., Reference Preston, Orlofske, Lambden and Johnson2013), they are traditionally ignored when studying food-webs. In the last decades, it has been shown that parasite–predator links are very abundant (36–44% of observed trophic links) in aquatic food webs (Lafferty et al., Reference Lafferty, Dobson and Kuris2006; Amundsen et al., Reference Amundsen, Lafferty, Knudsen, Primicerio, Klemetsen and Kuris2009). A large share of these links is formed by the concomitant predation when parasites are consumed together with their hosts (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Dobson, Lafferty, Marcogliese, Orlofske, Poulin and Thieltges2010). However, direct feeding on parasite free-living stages is also common in aquatic ecosystems (Lafferty et al., Reference Lafferty, Allesina, Arim, Briggs, De Leo, Dobson, Dunne, Johnson, Kuris, Marcogliese, Martinez, Memmott, Marquet, McLaughlin, Mordecai, Pascual, Poulin and Thieltges2008; Morley, Reference Morley2012). Thus, almost all groups of benthic organisms (e.g. carnivorous plants, cnidarians, turbellarians, oligochaetes, bryozoans, mollusks, crustaceans, insect larvae, fishes) were reported to consume free-living stages of parasites (reviewed in Thieltges et al., Reference Thieltges, Jensen and Poulin2008a; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Dobson, Lafferty, Marcogliese, Orlofske, Poulin and Thieltges2010; Orlofske et al., Reference Orlofske, Jadin and Johnson2015; Gopko et al., Reference Gopko, Mironova, Pasternak, Mikheev and Taskinen2017a).
The role of zooplankters as predators of parasites is much less studied. Many zooplankters feed on nano- and microparticles and were found to effectively clean water of various pathogenic bacteria (Escherichia coli, fecal coliforms, streptococci), cysts of parasitic protists (Giardia) and zoospores of amphibian chytrid fungus (reviewed in Buck et al., Reference Buck, Truong and Blaustein2011; Hamilton et al., Reference Hamilton, Richardson and Anholt2012; Jasper et al., Reference Jasper, Nguyen, Jones, Ismail, Sedlak, Sharp, Luthy, Horne and Nelson2013; Schmeller et al., Reference Schmeller, Blooi, Martel, Garner, Fisher, Azemar, Clare, Leclerc, Jäger, Guevara-Nieto, Loyau and Pasmans2014). Some zooplankters (copepods) were reported to consume macroparasites and vectors, for example, juvenile nematodes (Achinelly et al., Reference Achinelly, Micieli and García2003) and mosquito larvae (reviewed in Marten and Reid, Reference Marten and Reid2007).
The information about predation of zooplankton on trematode free-living stages (miracidia and cercariae) is still scarce though trematode larvae, especially cercariae, are often numerous in plankton (Morley, Reference Morley2012). The abundance of cercariae can reach up to 300 ind. L−1 in still freshwater habitats (Morley, Reference Morley2012) and their annual production in estuaries can constitute 10–43 kg ha−1 year−1 (Kuris et al., Reference Kuris, Hechinger, Shaw, Whitney, Aguirre-Macedo, Boch, Dobson, Dunham, Fredensborg, Huspeni, Lorda, Mababa, Mancini, Mora, Pickering, Talhouk, Torchin and Lafferty2008). On average, a single infected Lymnaea stagnalis snail can release more than 37 000 cercariae of the present study species, Diplostomum pseudospathaceum, daily (Karvonen et al., Reference Karvonen, Kirsi, Hudson and Valtonen2004a). The smallest trematode free-living stages are <200 µm in size and therefore can serve as prey for many planktonic crustaceans (e.g. raptorial cyclopoids and cladocerans), which are voracious predators of similar-sized motile food objects (Cummins et al., Reference Cummins, Costa, Rowe, Moshiri, Scanlon and Zajdel1969; Kerfoot, Reference Kerfoot1977; Brandl, Reference Brandl1998).
However, to our knowledge, there is only one study (Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Nansen and Frandsen1977) on feeding of zooplankton (Daphnia pulex) on miracidia (the first free-living stage of trematodes) and just a few focused on consumption of cercariae (Christensen, Reference Christensen1979; Tokobaev et al., Reference Tokobaev, Kutikova and Chibichenko1979; Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Frandsen and Nansen1980; Intapan et al., Reference Intapan, Kaewkes and Maleewong1992; Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007). For instance, cercariae of different trematode species are ingested by the predatory rotifer (Eosphora ehrenbergi) (Tokobaev et al., Reference Tokobaev, Kutikova and Chibichenko1979). Reported estimates of consumption of cercariae by planktonic crustaceans vary from a considerable effect (Christensen, Reference Christensen1979; Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Frandsen and Nansen1980; Intapan et al., Reference Intapan, Kaewkes and Maleewong1992) to the absence of a feeding response (Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007). Moreover, the influence of cercarial prey on the fitness traits of predators is still unknown. Cercariae contain glycogen and lipid stocks (Thieltges et al., Reference Thieltges, de Montaudouin, Fredensborg, Jensen, Koprivnikar and Poulin2008b; Morley, Reference Morley2012) that make them suitable food for zooplankters. In still waters, dense ‘clouds’ of cercariae are formed around infected freshwater snails and mussels, (Lyholt and Buchmann, Reference Lyholt and Buchmann1996; Taskinen, Reference Taskinen1998; Karvonen et al., Reference Karvonen, Kirsi, Hudson and Valtonen2004a; Morley, Reference Morley2012), the typical first intermediate hosts of trematodes. Such cercarial aggregations could be easily detected and consumed by planktonic predators living in the same shallow water habitats, especially by selective-feeders, which effectively search the attractive prey.
The key role of zooplankton in aquatic food webs and high biomass and nutritional value of trematode cercariae (Thieltges et al., Reference Thieltges, de Montaudouin, Fredensborg, Jensen, Koprivnikar and Poulin2008b; Preston et al., Reference Preston, Orlofske, Lambden and Johnson2013) suggest that these trophic links could be important. Removal of free-living stages of parasites by predators can strongly reduce parasite transmission in aquatic ecosystems resulting in decreased infection intensities and prevalences in host organisms (Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007; Orlofske et al., Reference Orlofske, Jadin, Preston and Johnson2012; Gopko et al., Reference Gopko, Mironova, Pasternak, Mikheev and Taskinen2017a).
The present study aims to assess the role of trematode cercariae as a food source for syntopic (sharing the habitat with mollusks producing cercariae) zooplankton organisms. We experimentally tested (1) the ability of rotifers, cladocerans and copepods to consume cercariae of the common fish trematode (eye fluke, D. pseudospathaceum) and (2) the effect of cercarial diet on the fitness-related traits of planktonic predators. Our hypotheses were (1) that certain freshwater zooplankters can consume/eliminate trematode cercariae and (2) that cercariae can serve as nutritious food objects, supporting their growth and reproduction.
Materials and methods
Study objects
Experiments were conducted at the Konnevesi research station (University of Jyväskylä, Finland) in summer 2016. We used cercariae of the eye fluke, D. pseudospathaceum for our study, because this parasite is very common in lymnetic systems of temperate and boreal zones and can hamper fish farming (Shigin, Reference Shigin1980; Karvonen et al., Reference Karvonen, Savolainen, Seppälä and Valtonen2006). Diplostomum pseudospathaceum infects mollusks (first intermediate host), many fishes (second intermediate host) and fish-eating birds (definitive host) (Valtonen and Gibson, Reference Valtonen and Gibson1997; Karvonen et al., Reference Karvonen, Savolainen, Seppälä and Valtonen2006). It decreases host fitness by reducing vision in fish (Owen et al., Reference Owen, Barber and Hart1993; Karvonen et al., Reference Karvonen, Seppälä and Valtonen2004b) and manipulates host behaviour to increase parasite transmission (Seppälä et al., Reference Seppälä, Karvonen and Valtonen2004; Mikheev et al., Reference Mikheev, Pasternak, Taskinen and Valtonen2010; Gopko et al., Reference Gopko, Mikheev and Taskinen2015, Reference Gopko, Mikheev and Taskinen2017b). In addition, cercariae of D. pseudospathaceum have different size, morphology and behaviour than most that have been used in previous feeding experimental studies (Christensen, Reference Christensen1979; Tokobaev et al., Reference Tokobaev, Kutikova and Chibichenko1979; Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Frandsen and Nansen1980; Intapan et al., Reference Intapan, Kaewkes and Maleewong1992; Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007).
Cercariae of D. pseudospathaceum were obtained from the infected pond snails Lymnaea stagnalis collected from the shallow nearshore habitats of Lake Konnevesi. Between the experiments, snails were stored in the dark at 4 °C. To induce cercariae shedding, they were placed under bright light at 18 °C for 2 h before each experiment. Zooplankton was collected from the same site (depth 0.5–3 m) as snails. Copepods and cladocerans were collected with a plastic bucket (to avoid their damage) and rotifers with a small Epstein plankton net (70-μm mesh). In the laboratory, we picked out individuals of several common planktonic species with a pipette (rotifers Asplanchna spp., cyclopoids Megacyclops viridis, Macrocyclops distinctus, calanoids Arctodiaptomus paulseni, cladocerans Sida crystallina). Before the experiments, zooplankters were acclimated to the laboratory conditions (18 °C, 20:4 L:D light) in 250-mL beakers filled with filtered (50-μm mesh) lake water containing natural microplankton for 24–48 h. All zooplankters tested in each experiment were from the same sample.
Short-term feeding experiments
The consumption of trematode cercariae (D. pseudospathaceum) by the predators (Asplanchna spp., M. distinctus, M. viridis, A. paulseni, S. crystallina) was assessed in incubation experiments which lasted for 5 h (Table 1). Since prey removal is often higher in the first hours of incubation (Conover, Reference Conover and Kinne1978) we additionally estimated grazing effect after the first 2 h of 5-h incubation experiments and in separate feeding experiments lasted for 2 h (only with copepods, which fed most intensively). Two species of cyclopoids (M. distinctus, M. viridis) were tested together because it was not possible to identify them to the species level before fixation in the end of the experiment. The number of M. distinctus was about twice that of M. viridis. Experiments with each planktonic predator were repeated twice on different dates, except for S. crystallina (only one experiment was conducted).
Mean sizes of zooplankters, their numbers per beaker (N, ind./120–125 mL), mean concentration of cercariae (cercariae mL−1 ± s.d.) in the control and predation treatments at the start and end of the experiment (C start, C final) and incubation times for each experiment are presented. There were five control (without zooplankters) and five predation treatment replicates in all experiments, except the exp.6 with Asplanchna spp. (three predation replicates). Predation effect was studied as a change in cercariae number in control vs. predation treatment at the beginning and the end of the experiment (effect of time × treatment interaction). More detailed data are presented in the Supplementary Table S1.
a Copepod prosome lengths and cladoceran body lengths were measured after fixation; rotifer body lengths (in the stretched state) were measured in vivo.
b Results of repeated-measures ANOVA. ns – non-significant effect (P > 0.05) of time × treatment interaction.
c Cercariae were counted also after the first 2 h of 5-h incubation.
In predation treatments, zooplankters were placed in the beakers with 100 mL of filtered (pore size 1 µm) lake water and acclimated without food for 4–7 h. Each beaker contained 10–19 crustaceans or 35–40 rotifers depending on the experiment (Table 1). Control treatments (without zooplankters) were used to assess changes in cercariae numbers unrelated to predation. There were five control and five ‘predation’ treatment replicates in all experiments. The only exception was one of the experiments with Asplanchna spp. where there were only three ‘predation’ replicates.
Cercariae of D. pseudospathaceum freshly produced (in 2 h before the experiment) from 4–5 snails were mixed and added in equal volume (20–25 mL) to all replicates in control and predation treatments. The age of cercariae was less than 2 h at the beginning of experiments and no more than 4 and 7 h at the end (depending on incubation time). Mean initial concentration of cercariae in different experiments varied from 6 to 28 cercariae mL−1 (Table 1). Such high concentrations of cercariae were used to simulate natural density of cercariae in the vicinity of infected snails (Morley, Reference Morley2012). We estimated the concentration of cercariae at the start/end of the incubation (in case of copepods also after the first 2 h of 5-h incubation) from three 2-mL samples taken from each beaker after gentle mixing. Averages from these three samples were used in the subsequent statistical analysis. Cercariae were counted in a Bogorov zooplankton counting chamber under a dissecting microscope (28 × magnification) within 2 h after sampling to avoid a decrease in cercariae number due to the natural mortality. The effect of predation was evaluated by the comparison of changes in cercariae numbers in control/predation treatments at the beginning and the end of the experiment using repeated-measures ANOVA. Clearance and ingestion rates were calculated according to Frost (Reference Frost1972) and Conover (Reference Conover and Kinne1978).
Mortality of zooplankters used in the experiments was assessed at the end of the incubation. Planktonic crustaceans were measured after fixation with buffered formaldehyde (2% final concentration), while rotifers were measured in vivo (Table 1). Sizes of D. pseudospathaceum cercariae (body length with furca) were also measured in vivo and varied from 375 to 550 µm (mean ± s.d. = 454 ± 60 µm, N = 50).
Testing the effect of cercariae on fitness traits of predators
Cyclopoids M. distinctus and M. viridis
Since M. distinctus and M. viridis demonstrated low mortality and significant removal of cercariae in incubation experiments they were chosen as objects for the additional long-term experiments. In the experiments, we tested how feeding on cercariae during 9–17 days affects the survival and reproduction in these cyclopoids. We used adult M. distinctus and M. viridis females (18 and 11 ind. respectively, identified at the end of the experiment). All females were at the similar spawning stage (after formation of egg clutches). In order to achieve this, females with egg clutches were sorted from the stock culture. After hatching of nauplii and formation of the next egg clutch these females were placed individually in beakers with 50 mL of filtered (pore size 1 µm) lake water and used in the experiment. They were maintained at 18 °C, 20:4 L:D light and fed only with the D. pseudospathaceum cercariae. Concentrations of cercariae varied from 8 to 13 cercariae mL−1 (average ± s.d. = 9 ± 3) from day to day but were similar in all beakers each day. Cercariae were produced every day by several (4–5) infected L. stagnalis snails placed in filtered (pore size 1 µm) water for 2 h. Before the addition of fresh cercariae, the water from each experimental beaker was removed by the pipette after gentle mixing (about 10 mL was left) and replenished by fresh food medium to restore the initial water volume. Each female was checked twice a day to monitor survival, egg formation and hatching. Numbers of hatched nauplii were counted by inspecting the whole water volume (50 mL) in a Bogorov chamber. To avoid cannibalism, the females were separated from nauplii immediately after hatching and placed in new beakers with cercariae. The nauplii hatched from the first clutch were not counted since their number can be more strongly affected by the female feeding before the start of an experiment than by experimental feeding conditions. The durations of clutch periods (=embryonic development time, from egg clutch emergence to nauplii hatching) and interclutch periods (time between two clutches) were calculated for each female throughout the experiment. At the end of experiments, all females were preserved with the formaldehyde solution (2% final concentration) for species identification and measurements of prosome length).
The STATISTICA 10 (StatSoft Inc., 2011) and R software were used for statistical analysis (R Core Team, 2017). To compare coefficients of variation (CV) of the clutch and interclutch periods in M. distinctus and M. viridis, we used an asymptotic test for the equality of CV from k populations’ (Feltz and Miller, Reference Feltz and Miller1996) from the ‘cvequality’ R package (Marwick and Krishnamoorthy, Reference Marwick and Krishnamoorthy2016). The ‘ggplot2’ package (Wickham, Reference Wickham2009) was used for graphical presentation of the data.
Rotifers Asplanchna spp.
Since microscopical observations of rotifers Asplanchna spp. at the end of the grazing experiments indicated that some large individuals ingested cercariae and then died we asked if cercariae can influence size structure of populations of this predatory rotifer. To answer this question we measured sizes of rotifers, which survived after exposure with cercariae (mean initial concentration 18 ± 1 cercariae mL−1) in the grazing experiment (38 ind., five beakers) and rotifers of the control group (54 ind., five beakers), exposed in filtered (pore size 1 µm) lake water without cercariae. Measurements were done in vivo (in the stretched state) under the microscope and then mean sizes were compared using t-test. The rotifers of both groups were from the same sample and acclimated and exposed (during 24 h) in similar conditions, but the control group was tested a day later (after the end of grazing experiment). Although the mean size of rotifers was not estimated at the beginning of the grazing experiment we supposed that it did not differ from the mean size of rotifers in the control group.
Results
Zooplankton feeding on cercariae
Cyclopoids M. distinctus, M. viridis and cladocerans S. crystallina significantly reduced the number of cercariae during all incubation experiments, i.e. time × treatment interaction was significant (P < 0.05 in all cases, Table 1, Supplementary Table S1). The effects of other tested zooplankters on cercariae numbers were significant only in some of the experiments. Rotifers Asplanchna spp. did not affect cercariae abundance in one experiment but showed a significant reduction effect (P = 0.009, Table 1, Supplementary Table S1) in another one. Calanoids A. paulseni removed cercariae (P = 0.028) in the first 2 h of one experiment, but their effect was not significant during the next 3 h of incubation and in the second experiment (Table 1, Supplementary Table S1).
The highest rates of the cercariae removal were observed for cyclopoids (mix of M. distinctus and M. viridis), which caused on the average 5-fold decrease in cercariae numbers in 5 h when compared with control (Table 1). The removal of cercariae by the cladocerans S. crystallina was less pronounced (average 2-fold decrease in 5 h), though the number of cladocerans in experimental beakers were slightly higher than that of cyclopoids (Table 1). Individual clearance rates constituted 1.5–3.6 (mean ± s.d. = 2.6 ± 0.8) mL ind−1 h−1 for cyclopoids and 1.3–3.2 (mean ± s.d. = 2.2 ± 0.9) mL ind−1 h−1 for S. crystallina. However, predation was discontinuous, thus the estimation of hourly clearance and ingestion rates is only approximate. Calanoids and cyclopoids (M. distinctus and M. viridis together) removed cercariae mainly during the first 2 h of incubation (on average 64–74% of all removed by cyclopoids cercariae). Therefore, clearance rates of cyclopoids calculated for this period (up to 4.8 mL ind−1 h−1, mean ± s.d. = 2.9 ± 1.2) were higher than rates obtained for whole 5 h period. The ingestion rates of cyclopoids also were the highest when calculated for 2 h period (mean ± s.d. = 33 ± 12 cercariae ind−1 h−1), but were lower and similar to the mean ingestion rates of S. crystallina (14 ± 3 cercariae ind−1 h−1) when calculated for 5 h period.
Effect of cercarial prey on zooplankton fitness traits
Consumption of cercariae affected their planktonic predators in different ways, e.g. supported reproduction of some species (cyclopoids M. distinctus and M. viridis) but increased mortality of other (rotifers Asplanchna spp., cladocerans S. crystallina). Microscopic observations of rotifers Asplanchna spp. at the end of the feeding experiments showed that some large individuals ingested 1–3 cercariae (Fig. 1) and died in the next 6 h. The mortality of rotifers exposed to cercariae (28% of the total number in 6 h) was significantly higher (Fisher's exact test, P < 0.001) than in the control group (<3%). The additional experiment (24 h) showed that incubation with cercariae changed the size distribution of rotifers. The mean (±s.d.) size of rotifers was significantly lower in with-cercariae treatment (t-test, t 90 = −3.96, P = 0.033) than in the control group (1.3 ± 0.3 mm, N = 38 and 1 ± 0.2 mm, N = 54, respectively). In addition, at the end of the experiment, large rotifers (>1.4 mm in size) constituted 13% of total abundance in the group with cercariae, while in the control group the share of this size class was 39%. It was not possible to obtain data about sizes of rotifers at the start of the experiment, but we suggest that size structure of both groups was similar, since they were randomly selected from the single plankton sample and maintained in similar conditions before the experiment. This difference in the size structure was possibly caused by the decrease in numbers of the largest rotifers (>1.4 mm in size), which ingested cercariae and were damaged by them as microscopic observations suggested. Cercariae kept moving inside the rotifers for a while after being ingested, often causing internal injuries of a predator by cercarial furcae. Small rotifers were not observed ingesting cercariae.
The mortality of cladocerans S. crystallina incubated with cercariae during 5 h was also high (25% of the initial number). Microscopic examination of the dead individuals showed that parts of cercariae clogged the filtration apparatus of the cladocerans. However, mortality of copepods (cyclopoids M. distinctus, M. viridis and calanoids A. paulseni) incubated with cercariae was low (<2%) and did not differ from the control vessels (P < 0.001 in all cases).
Long-term experiments showed that cyclopoids M. distinctus and M. viridis successfully reproduced when fed with the cercarial monodiet. Many of the females (45 and 39% for M. viridis and M. distinctus, respectively) produced up to four egg clutches in 17 days (Fig. 2, Supplementary Table S2). The duration of the whole cycle (from clutch emergence to emergence of the next clutch) and numbers of nauplii hatched from one clutch did not change significantly with time for both species (ANOVA, P = 0.85, 0.39 for M. distinctus; P = 0.88, 0.06 for M. viridis, respectively, Supplementary Table S2). Numbers of nauplii were significantly higher (t-test, t 51 = −8.67, P < 0.001) in M. viridis (53–160, mean ± s.d. = 89 ± 22 nauplii, N = 20), than in M. distinctus females (19–69, mean ± s.d. = 46 ± 13 nauplii, N = 33), which were smaller in size (mean ± s.d. = 1258 ± 139 and 1132 ± 70 µm, respectively). The larger cyclopoid species (M. viridis) had a longer interclutch period (mean ± s.d. = 50 ± 22 h), than smaller M. distinctus (mean ± s.d. = 24 ± 23 h) (t-test, t 64 = −4.44, P < 0.001), but had a shorter clutch period (mean ± s.d. = 55 ± 9 and 74 ± 42 h, respectively) (t-test, t 68 = 2.27, P = 0.026). As a result, the duration of the whole cycle did not differ between these species (P = 0.75) and constituted 24–259 h (mean ± s.d. = 97 ± 5 h) and 72–144 h (mean ± s.d. = 102 ± 3 h) for M. distinctus and M. viridis, respectively. In both species, the duration of the interclutch period was more variable (CV = 0.959 for M. distinctus, CV = 0.437 for M. viridis) than the duration of the clutch period (CV = 0.562 for M. distinctus, CV = 0.167 for M. viridis) (Fig. 2, Supplementary Table S2). These parameters were more variable in the smaller M. distinctus.
Discussion
The results obtained indicated that not only benthic (reviewed in Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Dobson, Lafferty, Marcogliese, Orlofske, Poulin and Thieltges2010), but also planktonic organisms could prey on free-living stages of trematodes. Consumption of cercariae by zooplankters was detected previously using radioisotope methods (Christensen, Reference Christensen1979; Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Frandsen and Nansen1980), but direct evidence obtained in feeding experiment are still scarce and provide controversial information (Tokobaev et al., Reference Tokobaev, Kutikova and Chibichenko1979; Intapan et al., Reference Intapan, Kaewkes and Maleewong1992; Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007). Thus, some species of cladocerans (S. crystallina, D. pulex, D. longispina), rotifers (E. ehrenbergi) and cyclopoids (Cyclops strenuous, Mesocyclops leuckarti) have been reported to remove cercariae of different trematodes (Schistosoma mansoni, Opisthorchis viverrini, Plagiorchis sp., etc.) <0.5 mm in size (Tokobaev et al., Reference Tokobaev, Kutikova and Chibichenko1979; Christensen, Reference Christensen1979; Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Frandsen and Nansen1980; Intapan et al., Reference Intapan, Kaewkes and Maleewong1992), but did not consume or demonstrated only low predation when fed with larger (about 1 mm, Orlofske et al., Reference Orlofske, Jadin and Johnson2015) Ribeiroia ondatrae cercariae (Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007). In our feeding experiments, we used cercariae of D. pseudospathaceum, which are differed by size (about 450 µm in size) and morphology from cercariae that have been investigated previously; however, the swimming behaviour of D. pseudospathaceum (intermittent with positive phototactic orientation) is similar to some of these species (e.g. S. mansoni, O. viverrini) (Haas et al., Reference Haas, Granzer and Brockelman1990; Haas, Reference Haas1992). Our results indicated that several common freshwater planktonic organisms (cyclopoids M. distinctus, M. viridis, calanoids A. paulseni, cladocerans S. crystallina, predatory rotifers Asplancna spp.) can consume cercariae of the trematode D. pseudospathaceum, which are often numerous in the nearshore lentic waters (Morley, Reference Morley2012). Removal of cercariae was the highest in cyclopoids, lower in cladocerans and minimal in calanoids and rotifers.
To our knowledge, this is the first study focused on the effect of cercarial prey on the fitness-related traits of their predators. Many food objects ingested by zooplankters (e.g. cyanobacteria, green algae, some dinoflagellates) are toxic or nutritionally poor, and can suppress the growth, fecundity and predator-avoidance behaviour of the consumers (Bernardi and Giussani, Reference Bernardi and Giussani1990; Koski et al., Reference Koski, Breteler and Schogt1998; Turner, Reference Turner2014; Lasley-Rasher et al., Reference Lasley-Rasher, Nagel, Angra and Yen2016). The obtained results showed that the removal of cercariae by zooplankters does not necessarily mean their successful digestion, but can lead to increased mortality of predators. Cercariae are likely to clog the filtration apparatus of cladocerans and cause heavy internal injuries by the cercarial furca in predatory rotifers, thus leading to high mortality of both groups of predators (25–28% individuals in 5–6 h).
In contrast, cyclopoids (M. distinctus, M. viridis), which can tear the soft prey into pieces (Brandl, Reference Brandl1998), survived well when fed with cercariae. They reproduced (up to four offspring generations in 17 days) when maintained exclusively on cercarial diet ad libitum. The average interclutch periods of these cyclopoids (1 and 2 days for M. distinctus and M. viridis, respectively) on cercarial diet were similar to reported for these genera in food-rich conditions (Phong et al., Reference Phong, Nabuko, Histohi and Takagi2008). In addition, the average number of M. viridis offsprings hatched from one clutch was higher in our experiments than in literature (Phong et al., Reference Phong, Nabuko, Histohi and Takagi2008). Therefore, these results showed for the first time that cercariae can adequately satisfy dietary needs of their predators, e.g. cyclopoids. It is important to mention that feeding conditions in our experiments were similar to natural high-density cercarial ‘clouds’ and intensities of predation on cercariae may be lower in the presence of alternative prey (Welsh et al., Reference Welsh, Liddell, Van Der Meer and Thieltges2017). Therefore, additional experiments are needed to clarify whether zooplankters can consume cercariae selectively and detect cercarial ‘clouds’ produced by infected snails in natural conditions.
The trophic links between cercariae and planktonic predators can be an important energy pathway from benthic organisms (mollusk hosts of trematodes) to zooplankton through parasites’ free-living stages. It is now well established that inclusion of parasites in ecosystem models causes changes in food webs topology, e.g. increase the linkage density, food chain length, connectivity and nestedness (Hatcher et al., Reference Hatcher, Dick and Dunn2012). The valuable role of cercariae in benthic food webs has been assumed previously (Thieltges et al., Reference Thieltges, de Montaudouin, Fredensborg, Jensen, Koprivnikar and Poulin2008b; Morley, Reference Morley2012); however, their impact on the energy transfer in plankton has not been studied yet. Since the production of both planktonic crustaceans and trematode cercariae is often high in the near-shore zone of lakes and ponds (Shuter and Ing, Reference Shuter and Ing1997; Lacroix et al., Reference Lacroix, Lescher-Moutoue and Bertolo1999; Preston et al., Reference Preston, Orlofske, Lambden and Johnson2013), trophic relationships between these organisms could significantly contribute to the energy flow in food webs, at least, in shallow lentic ecosystems.
Our data on species-specific effects of cercariae on survival and reproduction of their predators suggest that parasites can influence the structure of planktonic communities. For example, the diet composed of D. pseudospathaceum cercariae enhanced mortality in some zooplankters (e.g. Asplanchna rotifers) and facilitated reproduction in others (copepods M. distinctus, M. viridis) in our experiments. We suppose that similar effects may occur in natural communities, leading to parasite-induced alterations in the relative abundance of certain zooplankters and their prey (nano- and microplankton) and predators (e.g. fish larvae) through trophic cascades. Our observations on predatory rotifers Asplanchna spp. showed that many of the largest individuals died soon after they ingested cercariae, while the small Asplanchna were not observed consuming cercariae at all. Exposure of rotifers with cercariae led to a decrease of the largest size classes in the experimental group when compared with the control group (13 and 39% of total numbers, respectively). Thus, high abundance of cercariae in water may also lead to changes in the size structure in populations of planktonic organisms. However, this effect may be insignificant when cercariae are less abundant and there are other prey available because rotifers could avoid cercariae when having a food choice.
Another consequence of predation on infective stages of parasites is its negative effect on parasite transmission (Thieltges et al., Reference Thieltges, Jensen and Poulin2008a; Orlofske et al., Reference Orlofske, Jadin, Preston and Johnson2012). For example, aquatic cercaria-predators can remove a large share (up to 99%) of trematodes’ free-living larvae and reduce infection intensities in target hosts by 30–100% (Christensen, Reference Christensen1979; Schotthoefer et al., Reference Schotthoefer, Labak and Beasley2007; Orlofske et al., Reference Orlofske, Jadin, Preston and Johnson2012; Gopko et al., Reference Gopko, Mironova, Pasternak, Mikheev and Taskinen2017a). Our study indicated that cyclopoids can consume a substantial amount of D. pseudospathaceum cercariae, therefore their importance in the reduction of parasite transmission to fish hosts needs further investigation. Cyclopoids are common in coastal zones of lakes, where myriads of cercariae are produced by infected mollusks every day, therefore the removal of cercariae by these zooplankters could be substantial. We assume that in areas of high zooplankton densities fish may be more protected against infestation with cercariae.
Avoidance of parasites is an important factor structuring fish shoals and influencing fish habitat choice (Poulin and FitzGerald, Reference Poulin and FitzGerald1989a; Reference Poulin and FitzGerald1989b; Stumbo et al., Reference Stumbo, James, Goater and Wisenden2012; Mikheev et al., Reference Mikheev, Pasternak, Taskinen and Valtonen2013). Spatial distribution of small fish often correlates with high densities of zooplankton prey and is related to fish foraging needs, hydrography, etc. (George and Winfield, Reference George and Winfield2000; Höffle et al., Reference Höffle, Nash, Falkenhaug and Munk2013; Swalethorp et al., Reference Swalethorp, Malanski, Agersted, Nielsen and Munk2015). However, it is possible that fish aggregate with zooplankton also to avoid a parasitic threat. This assumption can be tested experimentally using non-planktivorous fishes. For the parasite, a release of cercariae close to zooplankton aggregations, which are attractive for fishes, can lead to the trade-off between the benefit of enhanced transmission and the cost of predation by zooplankters. Although the influence of predators’ presence in the environment on the cercariae release by a snail host is still unknown, the significant effect of chemical cues from the target host was previously shown (Mouritsen, Reference Mouritsen2002; Lagrue et al., Reference Lagrue, Rinnevalli and Poulin2017). Since trematodes have been reported to manipulate behaviour of their snail hosts in different ways, e.g. by changing morphology, habitat and feeding preferences of snails (Levri, Reference Levri1999; Miura et al., Reference Miura, Kuris, Torchin, Hechinger and Chiba2006; Kamiya and Poulin, Reference Kamiya and Poulin2012), they possibly can also regulate the production of cercariae depending on the presence/absence of the cercaria-predators in the environment.
Present results show the ability of zooplankters to harvest cercariae and reproduce on a cercarial diet, supporting the view of the important trophic interaction between zooplankton and parasite larvae. We assume that this can affect the functioning of aquatic food webs via direct consumption of cercariae and via indirect consequences on survival, reproduction and behaviour of other hosts in parasites’ life cycles (mollusks, fishes, birds). Further investigations are needed to test these assumptions and provide more information about the role of direct predation on parasite larvae in modifying the structure and functioning of freshwater ecosystems.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182018000963
Acknowledgements
We are very grateful to the technical staff of the Konnevesi research station (University of Jyväskylä, Finland) for their assistance.
Financial support
The research was supported by the Academy of Finland (J. T., mobility grants 298911, 311033); the Ella and Georg Ehrnrooth Foundation (E. M. and M. G. mobility grants 2016 and 2017, respectively), the Russian Scientific Foundation (V. M., M. G., grant no. 14-04-01171) and the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (V. M., grant no. 17-04-00247).
Conflicts of interest
None.
Ethical standards
The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional guides on the care and use of laboratory animals.