Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.

Micronutrients such as vitamins are transferred from lower to higher trophic levels, but no general ecological concept describes the factors regulating this process. Here, we investigated thiamin (thiamine, vitamin B1), which is an example of a metabolically important water-soluble micronutrient. Th...

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Main Authors: Samuel Hylander, Hanna Farnelid, Emil Fridolfsson, Marc M Hauber, Vittoria Todisco, Maciej J Ejsmond, Elin Lindehoff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0308844
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author Samuel Hylander
Hanna Farnelid
Emil Fridolfsson
Marc M Hauber
Vittoria Todisco
Maciej J Ejsmond
Elin Lindehoff
author_facet Samuel Hylander
Hanna Farnelid
Emil Fridolfsson
Marc M Hauber
Vittoria Todisco
Maciej J Ejsmond
Elin Lindehoff
author_sort Samuel Hylander
collection DOAJ
description Micronutrients such as vitamins are transferred from lower to higher trophic levels, but no general ecological concept describes the factors regulating this process. Here, we investigated thiamin (thiamine, vitamin B1), which is an example of a metabolically important water-soluble micronutrient. Thiamin is produced by organisms such as bacteria and phytoplankton, and all consumers, such as zooplankton and fish, rely on a continuous intake of thiamin through their diet and possibly from de novo-synthesized thiamin by gut microbiota. A deficiency in thiamin negatively affects reproduction in fish and bird populations worldwide. The aim of this study was to quantify thiamin transfer in a planktonic food web in response to thiamin and/or nutrient addition, using an outdoor mesocosm system (an approximately 1.9 m3 bag submerged in sea water). These estimates were then compared with literature data on thiamin concentrations at different trophic levels. The results showed that thiamin was rapidly taken up by phytoplankton in both the ambient and nutrient-amended treatments. However, large differences in thiamin concentrations in phytoplankton did not lead to any significant changes in community composition or abundance. Nitrogen addition led to changes in the abundance and community composition of picoplankton and phytoplankton but there were no additional major effects of thiamin addition. Differences in thiamin concentrations in phytoplankton were not detected at the next trophic level in zooplankton. Although the concentrations did not change, a greater abundance of some zooplankton taxa were developed in the thiamin treatments. Comparing the mesocosm results with literature data demonstrated a gradual reduction in thiamin concentrations along the food chain, with six percent of the concentration in producers occurring in top consumers (i.e., piscivorous fish). Overall, these observations illustrate the concept of trophic dilution of micronutrients where concentrations decrease along the food web from phytoplankton via zooplankton and planktivorous fish to piscivorous fish.
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spelling doaj-art-71876ac41b8d4d10bbdf95178fa9bbbf2024-12-06T05:31:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-011912e030884410.1371/journal.pone.0308844Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.Samuel HylanderHanna FarnelidEmil FridolfssonMarc M HauberVittoria TodiscoMaciej J EjsmondElin LindehoffMicronutrients such as vitamins are transferred from lower to higher trophic levels, but no general ecological concept describes the factors regulating this process. Here, we investigated thiamin (thiamine, vitamin B1), which is an example of a metabolically important water-soluble micronutrient. Thiamin is produced by organisms such as bacteria and phytoplankton, and all consumers, such as zooplankton and fish, rely on a continuous intake of thiamin through their diet and possibly from de novo-synthesized thiamin by gut microbiota. A deficiency in thiamin negatively affects reproduction in fish and bird populations worldwide. The aim of this study was to quantify thiamin transfer in a planktonic food web in response to thiamin and/or nutrient addition, using an outdoor mesocosm system (an approximately 1.9 m3 bag submerged in sea water). These estimates were then compared with literature data on thiamin concentrations at different trophic levels. The results showed that thiamin was rapidly taken up by phytoplankton in both the ambient and nutrient-amended treatments. However, large differences in thiamin concentrations in phytoplankton did not lead to any significant changes in community composition or abundance. Nitrogen addition led to changes in the abundance and community composition of picoplankton and phytoplankton but there were no additional major effects of thiamin addition. Differences in thiamin concentrations in phytoplankton were not detected at the next trophic level in zooplankton. Although the concentrations did not change, a greater abundance of some zooplankton taxa were developed in the thiamin treatments. Comparing the mesocosm results with literature data demonstrated a gradual reduction in thiamin concentrations along the food chain, with six percent of the concentration in producers occurring in top consumers (i.e., piscivorous fish). Overall, these observations illustrate the concept of trophic dilution of micronutrients where concentrations decrease along the food web from phytoplankton via zooplankton and planktivorous fish to piscivorous fish.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0308844
spellingShingle Samuel Hylander
Hanna Farnelid
Emil Fridolfsson
Marc M Hauber
Vittoria Todisco
Maciej J Ejsmond
Elin Lindehoff
Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.
PLoS ONE
title Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.
title_full Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.
title_fullStr Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.
title_full_unstemmed Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.
title_short Thiamin (vitamin B1, thiamine) transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels.
title_sort thiamin vitamin b1 thiamine transfer in the aquatic food web from lower to higher trophic levels
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0308844
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