共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Yoshihiko Machida Junsheng Zhong Hiromitsu Endo Hanling Wu 《Ichthyological Research》2002,49(2):194-197
A rare deep-sea ophidiid genus Mastigopterus known to contain two species, M. imperator Smith and Radcliffe, 1913 and M. praetor Smith and Radcliffe, 1913, was reviewed on the basis of six specimens including the holotypes of both species. Dorsal and
anal fin ray counts and the size of cephalic sensory pores previously thought to be diagnostic characteristics to discriminate
the two species did not suggest the presence of two forms, the large (M. imperator) and the small species (M. praetor), in the genus. Apparently the genus is represented by a single species, M. imperator, known from off Madagascar, the East and South China Seas and Papua New Guinea.
Received: September 7, 1999 / Revised: July 9, 2001 / Accepted: November 13, 2001 相似文献
2.
Tomiko Ito 《Limnology》2005,6(2):73-78
Lepidostomatid caddisfly larvae are typical detritivores, but they occasionally eat small dead animals. A laboratory feeding experiment was conducted with Lepidostoma complicatum (Kobayashi) larvae using two different feeding treatments: leaves or leaves and dead chironomids. L. complicatum larvae showed significantly higher growth rates and adult emergence weight and a significantly earlier emergence for the leaves and dead chironomids treatment than for the leaves alone treatment. However, the adult emergence rate was not different between the two feeding treatments. Thus, it is apparent that ingestion of dead chironomids by detritivorous L. complicatum larvae positively influences larval growth rates, adult emergence weight, and larval development time. 相似文献
3.
1. The evolution of host range and preference in phytophagous insects is driven by a female's oviposition choice impacting her offspring's fitness. Analysis of the fitness of progeny on different host plants has commonly been restricted to the performance of immature stages. However, since host use can affect adult size, it is important to measure the ongoing effects of host choice on the resulting imagines. 2. The orange‐tip butterfly, Anthocharis cardamines, shows a strong preference for two host plants in Britain, Alliaria petiolata and Cardamine pratensis, which affect body size. Whilst females exhibit a strong positive size–fecundity relation, the impact of body‐size alteration is unknown in males. In this study, fitness effects of host plant choice for male A. cardamines were examined. 3. Males reared on C. pratensis were smaller and emerged earlier than those reared on A. petiolata, and early‐season males were smaller than late‐season ones in the field. Interestingly, regression analysis indicated that the earlier emergence of small males was a host‐mediated rather than a size‐mediated effect. Small size was associated with reduced male dispersal in a semi‐isolated wild population over a 3‐year period. 4. It is proposed that the earlier emergence associated with C. pratensis has evolved in response to depressed dispersal in isolated/semi‐isolated populations associated with this patchily distributed host. We suggest that adult life‐history traits are important for the maintenance of host range in this species, and offer a critique of Courtney's earlier hypothesis that host range is maintained by time‐limited oviposition behaviour. 相似文献
4.
GEORGINA BRYAN 《Ecological Entomology》1983,8(3):259-270
ABSTRACT.
- 1 Most Achrysocharoides species and their Phyllonorycter hosts (Lepidoptera, Gracillariidae) have two generations per year in Britain.
- 2 In those species with separate sex broods, peak male emergence tends to be earlier than peak female emergence. This female emergence lag is shorter in the second generation.
- 3 The mean brood size in the second generation is significantly smaller than in the first in A.cilla males and females, A.latreilli females, mixed sex broods of A.atys, and A.carpini females. A.cilla, A.latreilli and A.niveipes generally have a significantly greater proportion of males in the second generation, but A.atys does not.
- 4 There is a shift to killing later instar Phyllonorycter larvae in the second generation, when a much higher percentage parasitism is generally achieved.
- 5 The intergeneration differences in sex ratio and brood size may be explained by a change in oviposition behaviour of females of the first and second generations.
5.
We examined whether or not sizes of eggs and offspring were related to emergence date or maternal size in a semelparous aquatic
insect (the burrowing mayfly, Hexagenia) in which parental care is lacking and oviposited eggs are passively dispersed. We quantified the size of males and female
imagos over the emergence span at a site on the Detroit River, Canada, and investigated relationships between emergence date
and female size and (1) egg size and (2) size of first-instar nymphs. Although size of female imagos (H. limbata and H. rigida combined) declined significantly (P<0.025) over the emergence season, there was no significant relationship between body length and emergence date for males
of either species. Males were significantly (P<0.001) smaller than females. H. limbata eggs, subsampled from three individuals from each of three size classes of female imagos collected on seven sampling dates,
were measured using video image analysis. Eggs (n=100) oviposited by each of 63 H. limbata imagos were inspected daily for hatching. Newly hatched nymphs were removed, counted and measured. Egg size (P<0.001) and size of first-instar nymphs (P<0.001) varied significantly with emergence date, but not maternal size. The largest eggs and newly hatched nymphs occurred
at peak emergence of adults. The synchronous release of larger (faster-sinking) eggs may result in reduced predation. Plasticity
in egg development time and egg and nymph size may account for the ability of this taxon to recover from episodes of massive
population reduction.
Received: 12 March 1996 / Accepted: 24 February 1997 相似文献
6.
The larval diet of three anisopteran (Odonata) species 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
CATHERINE BLOIS 《Freshwater Biology》1985,15(4):505-514
SUMMARY.
- 1 Comparisons between larval diets of three anisopteran species (Anax imperator, Aeshna cyanea and Libellula depressa) showed that their food intake changed depending on: (1) predator species, (2) time of year, and (3) developmental stage.
- 2 Although this last factor is not so important, the mean size of prey items and the range of prey species eaten by Auax imperator and Aeshna cyanea larvae increased with predator size.
- 3 Comparisons between prey availability and diets indicated differential selectivity by these predators.
7.
Global climate change has been implicated in phenological shifts for a variety of taxa. Amphibian species in particular are sensitive to changes in their environment due to their biphasic life history and restricted reproductive requirements. Previous research has shown that not all temperate amphibian species respond similarly to the same suite of climatic or environmental cues, nor are individual species necessarily uniform in their responses across their range. We examined both the timing of spring emergence and calling phenology of eight anuran species in southeastern Ontario, Canada, using an approximately 40‐year dataset of historical records of amphibian activity. Rana pipiens was the only species out of eight considered to emerge significantly earlier, by an estimated 22 days over four decades. Both R. pipiens and Bufo americanus have advanced initiation of calling over a four‐decade span significantly earlier by an estimated 37.2 and 19.2 days, respectively. Rana sylvatica showed a trend toward earlier emergence by 19 days, whereas we did not detect changes in emergence phenology for the remaining five species. This significant shift in breeding behavior for two species correlates to significant regional increases in spring temperatures of an estimated 2.7–2.8°C overall over four decades. Our study suggests that local temperature increases have affected the timing of emergence and the onset of calling activity in some Ontario anuran species. Global decline or range shifts ultimately may be related to changes in reproductive behavior and timing mediated by shifting climate. 相似文献
8.
Experimental evidence for predation risk sensitive oviposition by a mosquito, Culiseta longiareolata 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
1. Females should choose to oviposit in habitats where risk of predation and competition are low. The ovipositional responses of a mosquito, Culiseta longiareolata, to a predator and to species sharing the same trophic level as this mosquito (controphic species) were assessed experimentally in outdoor artificial pools. 2. The predator, larval Anax imperator, which strongly reduced larval C. longiareolata survival, resulted in a 52% reduction of C. longiareolata egg rafts. The controphic species (primarily Daphnia magna), which had a small but statistically significant negative effect on the survival of C. longiareolata larvae, did not have a statistically significant influence on the number of egg rafts. 3. Laboratory trials indicated that only a small fraction of the reduced number of egg rafts seen in predator pools may be due to consumption of the egg rafts by A. imperator. 4. The experimental evidence indicates that the reduced number of C. longiareolata egg rafts found in the presence of A. imperator is due largely to oviposition habitat selection, i.e. C. longiareolata females choose pools with low risk of predation for their offspring. 相似文献
9.
Abdalbaset A. A. Bugila Elsa Borges da Silva Manuela Branco 《Biocontrol Science and Technology》2015,25(1):108-120
Anagyrus sp. nr. pseudococci is an endoparasitoid which has been used as a biological control agent of mealybug pests. In this study, we compared the suitability of five mealybugs species with different phylogenetic relationships and geographical origins as hosts of this parasitoid. The selected mealybugs were: (1) a Mediterranean-native species, Planococcus ficus, sharing a long co-evolutionary history with the parasitoid; (2) three exotic species, the Afrotropical Planococcus citri, the Australasian Pseudococcus calceolariae and the Neotropical Pseudococcus viburni, with a recent history; and (3) the Neotropical Phenacoccus peruvianus, with no previous common history with the parasitoid. Host suitability was assessed based on different fitness parameters, such as body size, developmental time, emergence rate and sex ratio. The parasitoid was able to complete development in all mealybug species. Nevertheless, its emergence rate significantly varied among mealybug species, with the highest values observed in Pl. ficus and Pl. citri, intermediate values in Ps. calceolariae and the lowest ones in Ps. viburni and Ph. peruvianus. The body size of adult wasp females varied with host suitability and was positively correlated with other measures of parasitoid fitness, including the emergence rate and the sex ratio. The parasitoid developmental time differed among mealybug species but did not correlate with any other measure of fitness. A female biased sex ratio was found in the parasitoid progeny emerged from all mealybug species, except in Ps. viburni and Ph. peruvianus. There was a direct relationship between the proportion of females in the parasitoid progeny and the emergence rate. 相似文献
10.
Emmanuel N. Chidumayo 《Plant Ecology》2008,198(1):61-71
Seedling emergence from scarified seeds and mortality of different seedling cohorts of five African savanna woody species
(Acacia
polyacantha, A. sieberana, Bauhinia
thonningii, Dichrostachys
cinerea and Ziziphus
abyssinica) were studied under field conditions at a site in central Zambia. The study was conducted over a 4-year period, from 2003
to 2007. The objectives of the study were to determine climate factors that significantly influence seedling emergence rate
and mortality in order to assess likely responses of the studied species to a warmer climate. Mean seedling emergence rate
was 12% in D. cinerea and Z. abyssinica, 17% in B. thonningii, 47% in A. poyacantha and 62% in A. sieberana. Climate factors did not significantly affect seedling emergence in A. sieberana while temperature significantly influenced seedling emergence rate in the other species. Under a 1° warmer climate, seedling
emergence rate was predicted to decline in A. polyacantha, B. thonningii and Z. abysssinica but is likely to increase slightly in D. cinerea. Time of seedling emergence during the wet season did not appear to affect seedling survival. Temperature also significantly
influenced seedling mortality in all the studied species such that under a warmer climate, mortality was predicted to increase
in A. sieberana and D. cinerea but decrease in A. polyacantha, B. thonningii and Z. abyssinica. As the studied species exhibited differential optimum temperature conditions for seedling emergence and seedling survival,
they are likely to respond to climate warming in different but predictable ways. The results of the study are useful to forest
management and development of climate change adaptation strategies in southern Africa. 相似文献
11.
Gideon A. Erkenswick Mrinalini Watsa Alfonso S. Gozalo Shay Dudaie Lindsey Bailey Kudakwashe S. Muranda Alaa Kuziez Patricia G. Parker 《American journal of primatology》2019,81(12)
The establishment of baseline data on parasites from wild primates is essential to understand how changes in habitat or climatic disturbances will impact parasite–host relationships. In nature, multiparasitic infections of primates usually fluctuate temporally and seasonally, implying that the acquisition of reliable data must occur over time. Individual parasite infection data from two wild populations of New World primates, the saddleback (Leontocebus weddelli) and emperor (Saguinus imperator) tamarin, were collected over 3 years to establish baseline levels of helminth prevalence and parasite species richness (PSR). Secondarily, we explored variation in parasite prevalence across age and sex classes, test nonrandom associations of parasite co‐occurrence, and assess the relationship between group size and PSR. From 288 fecal samples across 105 individuals (71 saddleback and 34 emperor tamarins), 10 parasite taxa were identified by light microscopy following centrifugation and ethyl‐acetate sedimentation. Of these taxa, none were host‐specific, Dicrocoeliidae and Cestoda prevalences differed between host species, Prosthenorchis and Strongylida were the most prevalent. Host age was positively associated with Prosthenorchis ova and filariform larva, but negatively with cestode and the Rhabditoidea ova. We detected no differences between expected and observed levels of co‐infection, nor between group size and parasite species richness over 30 group‐years. Logistic models of individual infection status did not identify a sex bias; however, age and species predicted the presence of four and three parasite taxa, respectively, with saddleback tamarins exhibiting higher PSR. Now that we have reliable baseline data for future monitoring of these populations, next steps involve the molecular characterization of these parasites, and exploration of linkages with health parameters. 相似文献
12.
Several characteristics of the environment, such as plant litter, may interact with species characteristics, such as seed size, to determine patterns of plant establishment and thereby influence abundance and spatial location of plants long after the factor has itself disappeared. To determine if litter might differentially affect seedling establishment of Betula alleghaniensis Britton and Rhus typhina L., two woody species with different sized seeds, we conducted two greenhouse experiments. We documented emergence, morphology, and growth patterns of seedlings covered by three amounts each of Fagus grandifolia Ehrh. leaves or Tsuga canadensis L. needles. All amounts of litter significantly reduced and delayed final Betula alleghaniensis seedling emergence, and the resultant seedlings had reduced root: shoot ratios, longer hypocotyls, and were less robust. Litter did not affect Rhus typhina emergence but did alter biomass allocation: stem, leaf, and root biomass of Rhus seedlings was reduced by greater amounts of litter, and by leaf litter relative to needle litter. We attribute the different responses of Betula and Rhus to differences in seed size (Betula mean seed size = 1.0 mg; Rhus mean seed size = 8.5 mg) and germination cues (Betula requires light, Rhus requires chemical or heat scarification), and suggest that differential response to litter may contribute to coexistence among these sympatric species. 相似文献
13.
Toshiya Masumoto 《Ecological Research》1994,9(2):159-165
Field observations on the relationship between male mating success and emergence timing in the funnel-web spider,Agelena limbata, were conducted.Agelena limbata is an annual species and adult males appear slightly earlier than adult females in July. As males deposit a copulatory plug
at the female epigynum after copulation, copulation with virgin females is important to males. The number of copulations in
males with virgin females, which strongly correlates with the longevity of males and the number of females that males courted,
did not correlate with the emergence timing of males. Early emerged males and females were significantly larger in size than
later ones, but the correlation coefficient between the emerged date and the cephalothorax width was not strong. Males that
emerged earlier did not have any advantage in copulating with larger and more fecund females. Furthermore, virgin females
first copulated on average 7.9 days after their final molt and the mortality rate of adult males increased after the final
molt. These factors may favor the smaller degree of protandry in male emergence timing inA. limbata. 相似文献
14.
Emergence of some caddisflies (Trichoptera) from a wooded stream in southern Ontario 总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0
Twenty-eight species of nine families of caddisflies (Trichoptera) were identified in 170 samples taken over an 8-month period from five emergence traps placed on a second-order, forested, cold-stenothermal stream on the Niagara Escarpment, Ontario, Canada.A mean of 980.9 caddisflies m–2 of streambed was obtained over the entire sampling period. Eleven common species accounted for 92.8% of the total emergence with specific proportions ranging from 23.8% (Wormaldia moesta) to 0.11 % (Rhyacophila sp.). The use of various kinds of traps in other studies and their effects on the detection of species composition and abundance are discussed and compared with the present study.Although the distributions of all the common species were invariant over time, four species showed low to high degrees of patchiness in the streambed; the other seven common species were uniformly distributed. However, a large residual variance suggested a subtle mechanism of microhabitat selection by the larvae and (or) pupae, not detectable by even the small emergence traps used.Both sexes of 15 species, only males of 4 and only females of 9 species were collected. Eight of the eleven common species showed significant departures from a balanced sex ratio and five exhibited a protandry of from 1 to 3 weeks. Neither this study nor others have been able to establish a predictable pattern of sex ratios in Trichoptera.The emergence periods and patterns of the eleven common species are described and compared with other studies. Of these common species, one emerged in the spring, seven during the summer and three during the late summer or early fall. Ten species had a short emergence period with a distinct peak and a significantly skewed pattern. One species,Parapsyche apicalis, exhibited a prolonged emergence period, no distinct peak and a significantly platykurtotic2 pattern. With the exception ofLepidostoma sp. A, the emergence patterns of the common species were unimodal. 相似文献
15.
Individual size is an important factor that determines fitness in annual plants. Variation in size originates at the seedling
stage based on differences in seedling vigour and time of emergence, ensuing asymmetrical intraspecific competition between
early- and late-established plants. The effects of the order of seedling emergence on characteristics of barnyard grass (Echinochloa crus-galli) were studied. In the first experiment, competition between pairs of plants, one of which was sown and emerged 0, 3, 6 or
12 days earlier than the other, was determined. In the second experiment, competition between two plants that were sown at
the same time, but emerged at different times because of variation in seed quality, was determined. Competition decreased
plant mass, tillering, height and the number of caryopses per panicle, but not time to earing or root/shoot ratio. Plants
that were sown 3 days after the first plants in competing pairs grew to 32% of the size of solitary control plants, with the
effect of competition accounting for 40% and asymmetrical competition 28% of the total reduction in size. When a 3-day lag
in germination was determined intrinsically, plant size was reduced to 19% of the control, with the effect of competition
accounting for 34%, asymmetrical competition 15% and poor intrinsic quality of the plant 32% of the total reduction in size.
Small environmentally induced delays and more importantly, intrinsically induced delays in the time of emergence result in
a considerable decrease in final plant size and fitness. 相似文献
16.
Hannah M. Buchanan-Smith 《Primates; journal of primatology》1999,40(1):233-247
Niche separation is likely to play a key role in the formation of mixed-species groups. Saddle-backed tamarins (Saguinus fuscicollis) were studied at three sites with different primate communities in northern Bolivia: (1) with red-bellied tamarins,S. labiatus; (2) with emperor tamarins,S. imperator; and (3) without a congeneric species. The degree of association is higher betweenS. labiatus andS. fuscicollis than betweenS. imperator andS. fuscicollis and is related to differences in forest utilization between associating pairs. Niche separation is found to be greater betweenS. labiatus andS. fuscicollis than betweenS. fuscicollis andS. imperator. The mean height and habitat utilization ofS. fuscicollis does not differ greatly across the three sites, nor does the height of tamarins in and out of association. It is concluded
that combined with differences in body size and dietary overlap, vertical segregation plays an important role in tamarin polyspecific
associations (increasing the potential of both foraging and anti-predatory benefits) and that this is not a consequence of
vertical displacement ofS. fuscicollis by its dominant congeners. 相似文献
17.
Summary We conducted experiments in replicated circular streams to measure the effect of intraspecific larval density on growth rates, size at emergence, timing of emergence, and fecundity of two species of predatory stoneflies (Megarcys signata and Kogotus modestus, Perlodidae). Early instars of both species showed no significant effect of intraspecific larval density on mean growth rates, despite the observation that in the absence of competitors stoneflies ate on average, significantly more prey (Baetis bicaudatus, Ephemeroptera, Baetidae) than in the presence of competitors. However, larval size of stoneflies held at higher densities (two per chamber) diverged over time, resulting in a greater size variability (coefficient of variation) among Kogotus than in treatments with low densities of stoneflies (one per chamber). The effect of doubling the density of early-instar Megarcys larvae was also asymmetrical, resulting in one larger and one smaller individual. In contrast, doubling the density of last-instar stoneflies whose feeding rates declined significantly prior to emergence had few measurable consequences, except that male Megarcys, which continued to feed throughout the last instar, had lower average feeding rates in high-density than in low-density chambers, and emerged at a significantly smaller mean size. We conclude that competition between early-instar stonefly larvae results in an asymmetry of body sizes, but that competitive effects are reduced as larvae slow or cease feeding before emergence. Since larger females of both stonefly species produced more eggs, the probable cost to females of early-instar larval competition was a reduction in their potential contribution of offspring to the next generation. The cost of attaining a smaller body size for male stoneflies is unknown; but if, as in many other insects, larger males have greater reproductive success, larval competition may increase the opportunity for sexual selection among males. This hypothesis remains to be tested experimentally. 相似文献
18.
M. J. Barry 《Oecologia》2000,124(3):396-401
The predator-induced responses of two species of Australian Daphnia, with contrasting distributions and life history patterns, to the kairomones of two species of Anisops predators, were measured. Daphnia longicephala produced a large crest and attained a larger size when exposed to both predators. D. carinata sl matured earlier than D. longicephala and did not produce a crest. Surprisingly, kairomones of both predators inhibited the production of ephippia in D. carinata sl. Anisops stali, the larger of the two predator species, induced a significantly larger crest size in D. longicephala, and larger brood size in both species compared with the smaller A. gratus, indicating a quantitative but not qualitative effect of predator species on inducible defences.
Received: 18 August 1999 / Accepted: 14 April 2000 相似文献
19.
Effects of size at metamorphosis on stonefly fecundity, longevity, and reproductive success 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Many organisms with complex life cycles show considerable variation in size and timing at metamorphosis. Adult males of Megarcyssignata (Plecoptera: Perlodidae) are significantly smaller than females and emerge before females (protandry) from two western Colorado
streams. During summer 1992 stoneflies from a trout stream emerged earlier in the season and at larger sizes than those from
a colder fishless stream, and size at metamorphosis did not change over the emergence period in either stream. We performed
two experiments to determine whether variation in size at metamorphosis affected the fecundity, reproductive success and longevity
of individuals of this stonefly species and if total lifetime fecundity was affected by the number of matings. In the first
experiment, total lifetime fecundity (eggs oviposited) was determined for adult females held in small plastic cages in the
field. Males were removed after one copulation, or pairs were left together for life and allowed to multiply mate. Most copulations
occurred in the first few days of the experiment. Females in treatments allowing multiple matings had significantly lower
total lifetime fecundity and shorter adult longevity than females that only mated once. Multiple matings also reduced longevity
of males. Fecundity increased significantly with female body mass at emergence, but only for females that mated once. While
multiple matings eliminated the fecundity advantage of large female body size, number of matings did not affect the significant
positive relationship between body mass at metamorphosis and longevity of males or females. In a second experiment designed
to determine if body mass at emergence affected male mating success, we placed one large and one small male Megarcys in an observation arena containing one female and recorded which male obtained the first mating. The large and the small
male had equal probabilities of copulating with the female. Copulations usually lasted all night, and the unmated male made
frequent, but unsuccessful attempts to take over the copulating female. Our data suggest that selection pressures determining
body size at metamorphosis may operate independently on males and females, resulting in evolution of sexual size dimorphism,
protandry, and mating early in the adult stage. We emphasize the importance of interpreting the fitness consequences of larval
growth and development on the timing of and size at metamorphosis in the context of the complete life cycle.
Received: 1 July 1997 / Accepted: 12 November 1997 相似文献
20.
Biomass, plant size, plant density and the inequality of sizes were assessed for autumn-emerging roadside populations dominated
byGalium aparine during early stages of growth in two independent studies. A third data set dealt with the survival of labelled seedlings
belonging to different cohorts of emergence. One data set showed that the slope of the log-log size/density relationship for
all plant species present in the samples was closer to −1.5 and that forG. aparine was closer to −1.0 in five separate populations. Biomass increase and density decrease was not found to take place in any
of these simultaneously. The size inequality ofG. aparine tended to increase or to remain constant during periods of high mortality, and in the early harvests it was negatively related
to population density. The second data set revealed simultaneous decreases of both biomass and density ofG. aparine and of all plant species during a period of a month soon after emergence, and a higher size inequality ofG. aparine in those patches where plant density (and that ofG. aparine) was lower. The labelling of seedlings indicated density-dependent mortality and a higher probability of survival for seedlings
emerging very early. The size/density relationship of roadside populations dominated byG. aparine may follow a trajectory over time similar to that predicted by the 3/2 power law of self-thinning, but this species seems
to have a weak size hierarchy development and limited individual growth at high population densities. The importance of plant
architecture in relation to this response is discussed. 相似文献