Predation-dependent oviposition habitat selection by the mosquito Culiseta longiareolata: a test of competing hypotheses |
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Authors: | Moshe Kiflawi Leon Blaustein Marc Mangel |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Evolution, Faculty of Science, University of Haifa, Haifa 31905, Israel;Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Jack Baskin School of Engineering, University of California, Santa Cruz 95064, USA |
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Abstract: | We investigated the mechanism underlying oviposition habitat selection (OHS) in the mosquito Culiseta longiareolata. The putative outcome of a trade‐off between the risk of predation and detrimental density dependence, OHS in this species presents an opportunity to test two competing alternatives: (1) a polymorphic scenario, in which a fixed proportion of females constantly avoid ‘predator pools’, while the remainder oviposits at random; and (2) a monomorphic scenario, in which all females oviposit in predator pools with a certain probability. We present a conceptual framework that demonstrates how a simple experimental design – whereby predator incidence in artificial pools is alternated between 0.25 and 0.75 – can distinguish between, or refute, the two scenarios. Given the proportional use, by ovipositing females, of predator‐free pools observed under each treatment, and a bootstrap estimate of the ratio of daily oviposition rates, we find the monomorphic scenario twice as likely as the polymorphic. |
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Keywords: | Culiseta mechanisms Notonecta oviposition habitat selection predation |
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