scienceStechnology Tuesday, February Page 6 THE BATTALION , Kebruarv I A new angle for lake management Scientists examine role of fatty acids in health of aquatic ecosystems BY YOLANDA LUKASZEWSKI The Battalion Nutritional fads come and go, but one fatty acid that scientists find beneficial in human diets could also prove essential to the health of lake ecosystems. Plankton, tiny plants and animals, form the ba sis of food chains in lakes, and fisheries managers know that their health translates into the overall health of the ecosystem. Fisheries managers trying to create ideal con ditions for fish populations traditionally focused on the effects of nutrients, such as nitrogen and phos phorous compounds, on plankton communities. These nutrients can have a rippling effect through each trophic level, or rung, of the food chain, ultimately determining which species of zooplankton are available for fish to eat. But some researchers are now saying that di- QatolM] i Fish populations depend on healthy supplies of zooplankton t t The zooplankton Duphnia is one of the main consumers of algae in lakes. Increasing their population allows greater control of algae blooms and provide* more food for fish populations Herbivorous zooplankton consume phytoplankton. niiitoms, common |>li\to|)l:inltloii in lake ecosystems, are integral components of the hike ecosystem's food chain. They arc higher in food quality than other common plankton species, such as cyanobacteria. Phytoplankton use solar energy to transform dissolved nutrients into food. ROBERT HYNECEK/ ITti Battalion Fisheries scientists showed that diatoms, with high concentrations of one kind of fatty acid, are a more efficient food resource than other common phytoplankton. etary factors are also important considerations for healthy lake ecosystems. Scientists should stop looking at just total ni trogen and phosphorous. Dr. Daniel Roelke, as sistant professor of Wildlife and Fisheries Sci ences, said. “We should start looking at specific com pounds and how they are controlling, or at least influencing, other trophic levels in terms of their reproductive growth and success.” A group of aquatic scientists at the University of Califomia-Davis and the University of Washington are taking this different approach. They found that zooplankton, the tiny animal component of plankton, thrive on certain kinds of algae but not others. Some kinds of phytoplankton, the mi croscopic algae making up plankton’s plant component, are rich in a certain fatty acid that may he crucial to zooplankton growth. In laboratory experiments, the re searchers fed two types of phytoplankton, cyanobacteria and diatoms, to the zoo plankton Daphnia. They found that in summer, when the cyanobacteria dominated the lake, only 5 to 26 percent of the phytoplankton eaten by the Daphnia was converted to zoo plankton biomass. During spring and winter, when di atoms dominated the lake, 50 to 65 per cent of the phytoplankton Daphnia ate was converted to zooplankton biomass. Cyanobacteria is poor in eicosapen- taneoic acid, commonly known as omega-3 fatty acid, while diatoms are rich in omega-3 fatty acid. The Daphnia that consumed phyto plankton high in omega-3 fatty acid had higher egg production and growth rates, leading the researchers to conclude that the omega-3 fatty acid in diatoms made them more nutritious than cyanobacteria. This might explain the difference in growth. Omega-3 fatty acids keep cell membranes healthy and help form important hormones in an imals, Dr. Michael T. Brett, University of Wash ington assistant professor of Civil and Environ mental Engineering, said. Brett co-authored the study, published last month in the journal Nature. “Eicosapentaneoie aeid is the same dietars tat ty acid that is thought to be the health) compo nent of fat-rich fish like salmon and tuna in hu man diets," Brett said. “Phytoplankton that are more nutritious can have a major impact on the overall food web.” Brett said. “What the study shows is that the rate at which zooplankton convert phytoplankton to biomass depends on the supply of this class of essential fatty acids. This gives us important in sights into what may determine how cncrgv moves through aquatic food webs," he said. Scientists have known for some time that zooplankton do not grow well on evanobaete- ria, but they did not know exactlv why. Roelke said. This study is unique, he said, because the re searchers chose to look at a fatty acid to explain why zooplankton do not grow as well on cyanobacteria as they do on diatoms. However, algae living in nutrient poor env i- ronments will not be as nutritious as algae grow - ing in healthy conditions, regardless of the species or abundance, he said. Roelke said the study did not address how food quality varies depending on the physio logical state of the algae. Nevertheless, studying the role that omega- 3 fatty aeid plavs in aquatic food chains could have important implications for lake restoration and fisheries management. Based on the results of the study, fisheries managers might want to create an env ironment that favors nutritious algal species over poor food quality algae. M? FDA approves 1 a new digital Ags’f mammogram break world BY JASC The M ost athli want, c< their eh \\ \SI 11 N( iTON (AP) - Hk nation digital mammograms computenzedbit \-ra> s to hunt breast cancer — wereappp b\ the government Monday. 1 )igital mammograms appear as goodc hut not better than regular mammojtTaa detecting breast cancer, the h*xl and Dray ministration cautioned vanes trom pciso But the new digital niuminograph)stories to national chine, til Medical Inc s SenographcMj Texas AAA di>csolVcr potential advantages to rceukTHckvard is no i Y-n»ys: Howard is strixii I )igilal tnamnv'ciams can he stonx. limited bv a singk tromcall) so films are not lost, adjustedimdoCs not want to I rler-or o\erevposure withoutneetfiogiH "I \cr\boil\ M \ rav, .md sent electronicallv tosfxx. ones that hate to worldwide toi consultation. next lc\cl." \A Mettct. it is ,i Ion. -awaited first xtef :.coach Mel Nash me computers m even more sophifta.lost and that is hi ect breast cancer.DlDte I hat attitinf of breast imaging fi work well in a leral Hospital, who haste more to traimm tern. said. rather than eom| II open a new era inim® each competitioi etion ot breast canccr,"ktt Nc\cithclcss. list ol research that digits.c. swim each race I ihlc to move lorward.‘•Th5!‘i in the adjacent lai 1 I’ve got mv lingerserwe I he dctcrmina ire going to pan ouL Tlaipn X-lactor. th. ipporiunity ' to tr\ through three sea- \ mciK.in women undergo s* uric JO# now making its unogramseven vear. world ciicuit. !lie breast Vra\ is die cold standith: lodas. the ser ^ta^^n;p*ticularlvevHte F,N VSum " nm - ms are not loolpr* Sheffield. I nglan toped that compote his college talents d improve the Wfc mere m the l ump ved essentially a fe resenting the I X •i Alter two da England. I low ai d World C up on he mans. “It w ill he gooc opans lusettt udv th “Th better d direct* Gener th ast i man But mammograms coi The FDA approv ed ei in digital mtuumographv. cautioned rat ic dev ices chid Dr. Dan Schultz. -x—7~ Have vou always \ you always to the Breezy Tropical Caribbean? Welcome to to travel DOMINICA Graduate & Undergraduate Students! Spend your first summer session in the rainforest of the "NATURE ISLAND" while earning TAMU credit! 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