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Effects of habitat drying on size at and time to metamorphosis in the tree hole mosquito Aedes triseriatus
Authors:S. A. Juliano  T. L. Stoffregen
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Ecology Group, Illinois State University, 61790-4120 Normal, IL, USA
Abstract:Models of complex life cycles predict that greater mortality of immature stages should induce earlier metamorphosis at smaller sizes. We tested for effects of one source of mortality, habitat drying, on size at and time to metamorphosis of the tree hole mosquito Aedes triseriatus. In a laboratory experiment, we manipulated two variables associated with drying, volume of water and solute concentration, and recorded mean mass at and median days to eclosion for males and females in replicate cohorts. We also tested for treatment effects on the correlation of mass at and time to eclosion. For females, decreasing volume consistently induced metamorphosis at smaller sizes than did constant volume. Decreasing volume also led to earlier metamorphosis of females than did constant volume, but only in one of two experimental runs. For both sexes, increasing concentration led to greater size at metamorphosis and, for males, earlier metamorphosis than did constant volume, but again only in one of two experimental runs. Correlations of size at and time to metamorphosis tended to be positive for females and negative for males, and this difference was significant. For both sexes, decreasing volume led to larger (more positive) correlations than did constant volume, but only in one of two experimental runs. The effects of decreasing volume on females are consistent with the predictions of models of complex life cycles, and suggest that A. triseriatus can perceive volume changes and modify metamorphosis to escape a deteriorating habitat. The effects of increasing concentration are opposite to those predicted, and are consistent with enhanced growth rates, possibly due to enhanced microbial growth, as solutes become concentrated due to drying. The responses of these mosquitoes to habitat drying are complex, and we suggest that habitat drying increases both mortality and growth rates, yielding no simple predictions of how habitat drying will affect these mosquitoes in natural tree holes.
Keywords:Complex life cycles  Growth rate Mortality rate  Habitat deterioration  Phenotypic plasticity
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