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1.
Population and community dynamics of naidid oligochaetes were studied from June 1982–December 1983 in a sluggish, alkaline bog stream situated within Cedarburg Bog, Ozaukee County, Wisconsin, USA. Temporal differences in periods of peak abundance were observed for five species studied in detail: Chaetogaster diaphanus (mid-August and September), Chaetogaster diastrophus (mid-May), Dero digitata (mid-September), Dero nivea (mid-October), and Pristina leidyi (mid-October). Several correlations of abiotic and biotic parameters to density and percentage of naidids reproducing asexually were calculated. Mean doubling times (days) for field populations were 12.1, 22.7, 62.4, 19.6, 27.7 for C. diaphanus, C. diastrophus, D. digitata, D. nivea, and P. leidyi, respectively. Asexual reproduction by paratomy was the principal method of population increase. Sexual specimens were observed for Stylaria lacustris during June and October–December, D. digitata in September, C. diastrophus and Nais simplex during October, and C. diaphanus in October–November. Generally, a high proportion of the respective population was sexually mature when this type of reproduction occurred. Naididae community diversity index values using the Shannon-Weaver index ranged from 0.19–3.86.  相似文献   

2.
Asexual reproduction of the symbiotic sea anemone Aiptasia pulchella (Carlgren, 1943) was studied in the context of energy budgets determined under a variety of light and feeding conditions. Continuous darkness significantly increased rates of pedal laceration (the method of asexual reproduction), while different feeding rates had no significant effect. Digestive assimilation efficiency averaged 63% for whole brine shrimp, and conversion efficiencies (assimilated energy into biomass) averaged 31%. There were no significant differences between the conversion efficiencies of energy obtained from light or food. The index of reproductive effort (RE) for pedal laceration was very low, ranging from 0.004 to 0.044. This low RE associated with a substantial rate of asexual reproduction may, in part, explain the widespread success of certain sea anemones.  相似文献   

3.
Dimensionless numbers and life history variation in Brown Trout   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary Dimensionless numbers, made up from components of life history as defined by growth, mortality and maturation, may provide fresh insights into life history evolution. Most studies have previously shown that these numbers are more or less constants within taxa. The variation between taxa may clarify the evolution of different life histories. We examine the variation in three dimensionless numbers using data from 29 populations of Brown TroutSalmo trutta from Norway, and find that the dimensionless numbers are not constants for the Brown Trout populations. We find that the relationship betweenK of the von Bertalanffy growth equation and the mortality rate (M) increased with increasing growth rate. Also, relative length at maturity (L /L inf) increased with increasing asymptotic length (L inf). We suggest that more such data should be collected from a large number of species and taxonomic groups, to allow a more detailed assessment of why these dimensionless numbers appear to be constants in some taxa and not in others.  相似文献   

4.
Hard, highly calcified eggshells evolved several independent times during the history of amniotes. Because of phylogenetic conservatism of this trait, lineages in which closely related taxa differ in eggshell structure are rare. Four gekkotan families (Carphodactylidae, Diplodactylidae, Eublepharidae and Pygopodidae) have eggs with soft shells, while their close relatives (Gekkonidae) lay eggs with hard shells. Geckos thus offer a rare opportunity to compare the impact of the emergence of a hard eggshell on the economy of egg architecture. Because a sphere has the smallest surface area of all three‐dimensional solids of a given volume, spherical eggs in geckos with hard eggshells reduce calcium investment and should therefore be advantageous. Here, we document that hard‐shelled gekkonid eggs are indeed more spherical than those of the other gecko lineages. However, within gekkonids, small species lay more elongated eggs than larger species. We speculate that miniature gekkonid females, which lay larger eggs relative to body size compared with large gekkonids, produce elongate eggs in order to pass the egg through a limited pelvic opening.  相似文献   

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ABSTRACT.
  • 1 Horvathiolus gibbicollis (Costa), a ground-living seed-feeding bug of the mediterranean region, has two wing morphs. In macrop-terous bugs both pairs of wings are fully developed. In brachypterous ones forewings are reduced to about two-thirds and hindwings to less than a third of their length in macropters.
  • 2 Each morph bred true with regard to wing length when reared under variable density, food and temperature conditions for several generations.
  • 3 All F1 offspring between crosses of the two morphs were brachypterous. In F2 approximately 25% were macropters and 75% brachypters implying monogenic control of wingform.
  • 4 Flight muscles in macropters vary from fully developed to totally reduced. This variation is determined by environmental conditions during adult life. Most young adult bugs have flight muscles, and totally starved or unmated bugs retain their flight muscles. Fed and mated females histolyse flight muscles as they start laying eggs, while most males of the same group retain their muscles.
  • 5 Brachypterous bugs have a smaller thorax and larger abdomen than macropterous ones.
  • 6 Brachypterous bugs reach adulthood slightly before macropterous ones, and they have a distinctly shorter adult preoviposition period.
  • 7 Lifetime egg production does not differ significantly between the two wing morphs. However, the temporal pattern of egg laying is different in the two morphs. The mx-curve of macropters starts later, then attains a higher peak and finally decreases faster than that of brachypters.
  • 8 Initially, macropters lay smaller eggs than brachypters, but egg volume increases with age in macropters and eventually approaches that of brachypters.
  • 9 The initial increase in reproductive effort (egg volumexegg number) of macropters is concomitant with wing muscle histolysis and the mobilization of thorax space for reproduction.
  • 10 Adult survival rate does not differ between the morphs.
  相似文献   

7.
The effect of five different food concentrations on the life history of Ceriodaphnia cf. dubia was examined by following cohorts of 25 individuals from <24 hours until the death of all individuals. The food concentrations used in the study were chosen to reflect densities found in lentic freshwater systems and those commonly used in toxicity testing, and ranged from 1 × 104 cells mL-1 to 15 × 104 cells mL-1. Food concentration was found to have a significant effect (p<0.05) on several life history parameters, with a decrease in food concentration leading to a decrease in brood sizes and population growth rate, and an increase in longevity. Population growth rates varied from approximately 0.39 neonates d-1 to 0.54 neonates d-1, while mean lifespan ranged from 16.7 days to 42.9 days. A decrease in food concentration also led to an increase in the mean generation time.  相似文献   

8.
This paper compares male life history parameters of two populations of Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata Blyth, 1875), studied without provisioning: Yakushima (M. f. yakui), a subtropical forest habitat in southwestern Japan, and Kinkazan (M. f. fuscata), a temperate, deciduous forest habitat in northeastern Japan. The males of the two sites experienced similar life histories with respect to several traits. Age at natal dispersal was at about 5 years. Average troop residence was about three years. Most males joined troops at the bottom of the rank order, although a few males joined troops at the top rank. Dominance ranks of males tended to rise with the death or departure of higher ranking males. Visiting males accounted for about 41% of observed mating at both sites. However, the two sites differed in the sex ratio of troops, partly because a larger proportion of males apparently lived outside of troops in the Kinkazan site compared to Yakushima. In particular, non-natal young males were absent from the main study troop at Kinkazan. Large within-species variation may exist in the degree to which males associate with troops.  相似文献   

9.
The knowledge of the life histories of wild mammals is of crucial importance in the field of conservation management. The endangered status of many species calls for faster data collection that can be used in risk assessment and, ultimately, for designing conservation policies. This study is pioneering the potential of bone histology to provide data on life history traits crucial for conservation biology in long-lived mammals. Long bone cross-sections show pronounced annual cycles of growth arrest allowing application of skeletochronology (counts of lines of arrested growth ‘LAGs’). Consequently, the number of LAGs within the primary fast-growing bone tissue up to the outer cortical slow-growing bone tissue corresponds to the age at first reproduction; whereas the age at death can be estimated by the total number of rest lines throughout the whole of bone cross-section. Furthermore, the diameters of successive growth rings as well as the osteocyte lacuna density may shed light on growth rates. We use the endangered desert dwelling antelope Addax nasomaculatus as a case study. By analyzing different ontogenetic stages in five Addax individuals (three captive and two wild specimens) from a museum collection, we show that bone histology may be a reliable tool for determining certain key life history traits. In our sample, the wild Addax female attained reproductive maturity at three years, whereas the male specimens, both the captive and the wild ones, reached maturity at four years. This is congruent with data from other large antelopes with male-biased size dimorphism, but differs slightly from data on sexual maturity previously published for wild Addax. Moreover, quantification of osteocyte lacunae in both adult males provides a higher cell density in the captive one than in the wild one suggesting the strong effect of constant resources supply in individuals from zoos on growth rates. While age at first reproduction and longevity are essentials parameters to carry out demographic models, growth rates may allow evaluation of the health status of wild populations. This approach may provide useful data on life history traits when applied to bones collected in the wild.  相似文献   

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We assessed the importance of three behavioral processes on the fitness of individual females as mediated via maternal care in matrilineally organized social groups of spotted hyenas Crocuta crocuta. These were maternal choice of foraging tactic, the maintenance of individual dominance rank (social status) within the adult female hierarchy, and the behavioral support provided by mothers to their daughters when daughters acquired their position in the adult female hierarchy. The effects of all behavioral processes were closely linked. Maternal care was dependent on maternal social status because high ranking females had priority of access to food, and individual maternal choice of foraging tactic was frequency – and social status-dependent when medium prey abundance provided an opportunity for such a choice. At medium prey abundance, low ranking females went on costly long distance commuting trips to forage on migratory herds outside the group territory, whereas high ranking females fed on kills within the group territory. As a consequence, offspring of high ranking females grew faster, had a higher chance of survival to adulthood, and thus high ranking females had a higher lifetime reproductive success. Daughters of high ranking females usually acquired a social status immediately below that of their mother provided they enjoyed the effective support from their mothers as coalition partners, and they gave birth to their first litter at an earlier age than daughters of low ranking mothers. Spotted hyenas are therefore an example of the silver-spoon effect. This study shows that the frequency-dependent outcome of behavioral processes can be a key determinant of maternal reproductive success in social carnivores and have a profound influence on the reproductive career prospects of offspring.  相似文献   

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