Aquatic organisms, ranging from bacteria to fish, living in clear lakes are presently receiving damaging levels of UV radiation. Photoreactivation is a light-dependent mechanism by which some organisms deal with DNA damage caused by UV radiation. Yet, photoreactivation is a mechanism that confounds long-term predictive modeling of UV effects on the survival of these organisms. Here we show that a short-lived rotifer species, Asplanchna girodi, previously thought to have little to no photoreactivation, does indeed have a significant amount of it. The ability to undergo photoreactivation in A. girodi is dependent on age and becomes apparent only after several days of observation after UV exposure.
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1 September 2003
UV Damage and Photoreactivation: Timing and Age are Everything
Gabriella Grad,
Bethany J. Burnett,
Craig E. Williamson
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Photochemistry and Photobiology
Vol. 78 • No. 3
September 2003
Vol. 78 • No. 3
September 2003