Contrasting life histories of the predatory cladocerans Leptodora kindtii and Bythotrephes longimanus |
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Authors: | Branstrator Donn K. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, University of Minnesota Duluth, Duluth, MN 55812, USA |
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Abstract: | The predatory cladocerans, Leptodora kindtii (Focke, 1844) andBythotrephes longimanus (Leydig, 1860), express markedly differentlife-history traits. Leptodora produce small-bodied neonatesthat mature at small sizes but continue to grow throughout life.Bythotrephes produce larger neonates in both relative and absoluteterms that grow rapidly to a large size at maturity whereuponthey curtail somatic growth and divert resources mainly to reproduction.Despite their remarkable differences, the sets of life-historytraits of both species appear to be solutions to the same basicselection pressures imposed by visually discriminating gape-limitedfishes and foraging constraints imposed by prey size. Leptodorastresses pre-contact (transparency) while Bythotrephes stressespostcontact (caudal spine) modes of morphological defense againstfishes. Mounting these disparate modes of defense has consequencesfor selection on timing and allocation to body growth that mayunderlie competitive imbalance between the species. Owing tothe production of large-bodied neonates that grow rapidly, Bythotrephesquickly attain body sizes that both admit them to a broaderprey base in size and taxonomic variety, and allow shorter preyhandling times, in comparison to Leptodora. This provides Bythotrepheswith a wider and more exploitable prey base from an earlierage and may explain why Leptodora has declined in density followingBythotrephes invasion into some North American lakes. The divergentsets of life-history traits expressed by Leptodora and Bythotrephesparallel two dominant life-history strategies evolved by phytoplanktivorousspecies of the order Cladocera. |
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