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Resource utilization by the freshwater deposit feeder Ptychoptera townesi (Diptera: Ptychopteridae)
Authors:ROSANNA L MATTINGLY
Institution:Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, U.S.A.
Abstract:SUMMARY 1. False crane fly larvae, Ptychoptera townesi (Diptera), occurred in high densities in a flow-controlled section of stream where fine particulate organic matter (FPOM; 0.45 μm to 1 mm in diameter) had accumulated, but were quite rare both upstream and downstream from the section.
2. In laboratory studies, P. townesi grew only on FPOM less than 250 μm. Larvae consistently grew fastest when fed small particles (0.45–53 μm in diameter).
3. Ptychoptera townesi consumed relatively small amounts (0.002 mg per mg animal dry mass day−1) of FPOM (0.45–53 μm). They had long gut content passage times (greater than 19 h) and relatively high efficiencies of conversion of ingested food to body substance (20.7%). Gut content passage times were variable, and depended partially on the nature of the substrate.
4. False crane fly larvae compacted FPOM into faecal pellets considerably larger in size than particles ingested. They lost mass when allowed to feed on their own faecal material, as well as on faeces greater than 250 μm in diameter produced by shredders. However, they survived and grew on shredder faeces (53–500 μm in diameter) that contained a mixture of smaller particles and particles too large for ingestion.
5. The overall pattern of resource utilization by P. townes involved slow handling of relatively small volumes of food, which probably passed once only through a complex alimentary tract.
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