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The effect of food supply and larval cannibalism on adult size and biomass of the grazing caddis-fly Melampophylax mucoreus (Limnephilidae)
Authors:Bernd Spänhoff  Christian Kock  Alexander Meyer  Elisabeth I Meyer
Institution:Institute of Animal Evolution and Ecology, Department of Limnology, University of Münster, Germany
Abstract:Abstract. 1. Larvae of the grazing caddis‐fly Melampophylax mucoreus were reared in a laboratory experiment investigating the effect of food availability on different substrates and cannibalism on the size and biomass of emergent adults. All experiments were performed in stream‐water filled, aerated aquaria under controlled temperature and light conditions. Larvae (fourth and fifth instar) were reared in aquaria (50 larvae in each) with three substrate scenarios: (i) limestone (LS), (ii) limestone and leaf litter (LS + L), and (iii) silicate stone (SS). 2. Cannibalism among the larvae in the LS scenario led to the highest adult dry masses (male = 5.13 ± 0.25 mg, female = 7.64 ± 0.63 mg) and to the highest mortality rate (88.7%). The SS scenario displayed the most unfavourable condition for larval growth indicated by the lowest adult dry masses (males = 3.12 ± 0.15 mg, females = 4.69 ± 0.25 mg) and a high mortality rate (81.7%). The limestone supplemented with leaf litter (ii) offered the most balanced nutrients to complete larval development and enough shelter to avoid excessive encounter rates of larvae within the aquaria, indicated by the lowest mortality rate (43.6%). Adults from the LS + L scenario showed biomasses (male = 3.94 ± 0.12 mg, female = 6.48 ± 0.24 mg) intermediate between the two other scenarios. 3. The results implied that cannibalism among larvae can lead to higher adult biomasses and therefore to increased fitness, if cannibalism supplements larval feeding requirements. Larvae developing under insufficient food availability can not compensate for this by cannibalism. Additionally, leaf litter not only provided a complementary food source for developing larvae, but also provided shelter, which reduced encounter rates. 4. Increased stress induced by high larval encounter rates (resulting in enhanced cannibalism) in the LS scenario and low food availability in the SS scenario could be indicated by premature emergence times compared with the LS + L scenario.
Keywords:Adult fitness  aggressive behaviour  larval growth  life history  Trichoptera
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