Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour

Daphnia are small planktonic crustaceans that are commonly found in lakes and ponds. They are commonly used as experimental organism to investigate the effects of external stimuli on the aquamarine ecosystem. There has been a myriad of studies showcasing the effects of different stimuli and its i...

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Main Author: Ho, Wei How
Other Authors: Tuan Tran
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164006
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1640062023-03-04T20:21:43Z Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour Ho, Wei How Tuan Tran School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering ttran@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics Daphnia are small planktonic crustaceans that are commonly found in lakes and ponds. They are commonly used as experimental organism to investigate the effects of external stimuli on the aquamarine ecosystem. There has been a myriad of studies showcasing the effects of different stimuli and its impact on Daphnia mortality, and these studies tend to be over a long period of time or use complicated parameters. However, Daphnia mortality may not be sufficient and accurate to appraise the stimulus’ long-term consequences on Daphnia and its water ecosystem. As such, this project will focus on stimuli effect on swimming behaviour with quantitative parameters, allowing us to better study Daphnia behaviour as compared to a binary endpoint of mortality. Daphnia will be experimented with common waterbody microplastic pollutants such as Nylon12 (PA12), Polyethylene (PE), and Acetamiprid (pesticide) over various concentrations. In addition, daphnia of varying sizes will be experimented with. The results show that, Nylon 12 acts as a stimulus for Daphnia Magna at all experimented concentrations, Polyethylene too acts as a stimulus for Daphnia Magna but only up till concentrations of about 150 mg/L before inhibition. Adversely, Acetamiprid is not a stimulus for Daphnia Magna, as it generally decreases swimming activity, and should be noted as hazardous for Daphnia. Daphnia size only affects swimming behaviour at the start of the experiment. After the experiments are conducted and data collected, it can be concluded that the 2 microplastics are a stimulus to Daphnia and its ecosystem, and Acetamiprid is generally harmful. Daphnia size affects initial swimming behaviour but has no observable effect on swimming behaviour otherwise. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2023-01-03T07:31:23Z 2023-01-03T07:31:23Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Ho, W. H. (2023). Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164006 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164006 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics
spellingShingle Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics
Ho, Wei How
Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
description Daphnia are small planktonic crustaceans that are commonly found in lakes and ponds. They are commonly used as experimental organism to investigate the effects of external stimuli on the aquamarine ecosystem. There has been a myriad of studies showcasing the effects of different stimuli and its impact on Daphnia mortality, and these studies tend to be over a long period of time or use complicated parameters. However, Daphnia mortality may not be sufficient and accurate to appraise the stimulus’ long-term consequences on Daphnia and its water ecosystem. As such, this project will focus on stimuli effect on swimming behaviour with quantitative parameters, allowing us to better study Daphnia behaviour as compared to a binary endpoint of mortality. Daphnia will be experimented with common waterbody microplastic pollutants such as Nylon12 (PA12), Polyethylene (PE), and Acetamiprid (pesticide) over various concentrations. In addition, daphnia of varying sizes will be experimented with. The results show that, Nylon 12 acts as a stimulus for Daphnia Magna at all experimented concentrations, Polyethylene too acts as a stimulus for Daphnia Magna but only up till concentrations of about 150 mg/L before inhibition. Adversely, Acetamiprid is not a stimulus for Daphnia Magna, as it generally decreases swimming activity, and should be noted as hazardous for Daphnia. Daphnia size only affects swimming behaviour at the start of the experiment. After the experiments are conducted and data collected, it can be concluded that the 2 microplastics are a stimulus to Daphnia and its ecosystem, and Acetamiprid is generally harmful. Daphnia size affects initial swimming behaviour but has no observable effect on swimming behaviour otherwise.
author2 Tuan Tran
author_facet Tuan Tran
Ho, Wei How
format Final Year Project
author Ho, Wei How
author_sort Ho, Wei How
title Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
title_short Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
title_full Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
title_fullStr Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
title_sort experimental study of zooplankton behaviour
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164006
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