Larval cannibalism, time constraints, and adult fitness in caddisflies that inhabit temporary wetlands

被引:69
|
作者
Wissinger, S [1 ]
Steinmetz, J
Alexander, JS
Brown, W
机构
[1] Allegheny Coll, Dept Biol, Meadville, PA 16335 USA
[2] Allegheny Coll, Dept Environm Sci, Meadville, PA 16335 USA
[3] Rocky Mt Biol Labs, Crested Butte, CO 81224 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
detritivores; dietary supplement; life history; habitat drying;
D O I
10.1007/s00442-003-1397-y
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The fitness of non-feeding adult insects depends on energy accumulated during the larval stage. Larvae of the caddisfly Asynarchus nigriculus primarily feed on plant detritus, but supplement their diet with animal material obtained through cannibalism. Habitat drying constrains development in many populations of this species, and we hypothesized that cannibalism should accelerate development to facilitate timely metamorphosis. We manipulated larval diets in a field experiment by supplementing detritus with animal material, and in a laboratory experiment by varying animal material and detritus quality (conditioned vs unconditioned). We measured the effects of dietary manipulation on larval and pupal growth and development, the timing of metamorphosis, and adult fitness correlates. The results of the laboratory experiment suggest that this species can metamorphose with a detritus-only diet, but development is extremely protracted. In the field experiment, individuals with animal material in their diet had higher larval survival, shorter larval and pupal development times, and earlier emergence dates (7-10 days), than those without a supplement. This delay in emergence should have important effects on survival in natural populations where the difference between desiccation and successful emergence can be only a few days. Dietary supplementation also affected adult body mass (30-40% increase), female fecundity (30% more eggs), and proportional allocation to different adult body parts. Our results are consistent with recent growth-development models that predict coupled (earlier emergence and larger adults) rather than tradeoff responses (earlier emergence and smaller adults) to pre-threshold manipulation of larval diets. Many detritivorous aquatic insects supplement their diets with animal material, and our data provide evidence that this supplementation can have strong effects on fitness. This type of dietary supplementation should be especially important for taxa that do not feed as adults, and in temporary habitats that impose time constraints on larval development.
引用
收藏
页码:39 / 47
页数:9
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] Larval cannibalism, time constraints, and adult fitness in caddisflies that inhabit temporary wetlands
    Scott Wissinger
    Jeff Steinmetz
    J. Scott Alexander
    Wendy Brown
    [J]. Oecologia, 2004, 138 : 39 - 47
  • [2] The role of larval cases in reducing aggression and cannibalism among caddisflies in temporary wetlands
    Wissinger, SA
    Eldermire, C
    Whissel, JC
    [J]. WETLANDS, 2004, 24 (04) : 777 - 783
  • [3] The role of larval cases in reducing aggression and cannibalism among caddisflies in temporary wetlands
    Scott A. Wissinger
    Charles Eldermire
    John C. Whissel
    [J]. Wetlands, 2004, 24 : 777 - 783
  • [4] Cannibalism and activity rate in larval damselflies increase along a latitudinal gradient as a consequence of time constraints
    Szymon Sniegula
    Maria J. Golab
    Frank Johansson
    [J]. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 17
  • [5] Cannibalism and activity rate in larval damselflies increase along a latitudinal gradient as a consequence of time constraints
    Sniegula, Szymon
    Golab, Maria J.
    Johansson, Frank
    [J]. BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2017, 17
  • [6] The interplay of adult and larval time constraints shapes species differences in larval life history
    Mikolajewski, Dirk J.
    De Block, Marjan
    Stoks, Robby
    [J]. ECOLOGY, 2015, 96 (04) : 1128 - 1138