VARIATION IN FOOD QUALITY AND TEMPERATURE CONSTRAIN FORAGING OF GREGARIOUS CATERPILLARS

被引:111
作者
STAMP, NE
BOWERS, MD
机构
[1] UNIV COLORADO, DEPT ENVIRONM POPULAT & ORGANISM BIOL, BOULDER, CO 80309 USA
[2] UNIV COLORADO MUSEUM, BOULDER, CO 80309 USA
关键词
D O I
10.2307/1937371
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Hemileuca lucina (Saturniidae) specializes on the shrub Spiraea latifolia (Rosaceae). First-instar larvae, which in nature encounter only new leaves, showed no preference for new leaves over mature ones. Third-instar larvae, which normally encounter both leaf types, exhibited a preference for new leaves. Larvae in groups were more likely to survive and exhibited less variation in biomass gained than solitary larvae. An experiment determined the interactions of temperature (with daytime temperatures of 20°, 25°, or 30°C), group size (solitary or in groups of 10), and diet (new or mature leaves) on 3rd instar larvae. At a daytime temperature of 20°, representing overcast and cool spring conditions, growth rates were similar for all group size-diet combinations; there was no advantage in feeding on new leaves or in larval groups. Solitary larvae fed mature leaves gained less mass and developed more slowly than the other group size-diet combinations at the mean maximal day temperature (25°) for field conditions. At 30°, representing the average temperature reached through basking, larvae eating new leaves grew significantly faster than those on mature leaves, regardless of larval group size. Thus, in the absence of predators, in which case larvae eat new leaves, bask and remain aggregated, larvae can grow twice as fast and attain more biomass per instar than solitary larvae eating mature leaves in the shade, which is often the case when they avoid predators. -from Authors
引用
收藏
页码:1031 / 1039
页数:9
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]   MOLT AS A COMPONENT OF INSECT DEVELOPMENT - GALERUCELLA-SAGITTARIAE (CHRYSOMELIDAE) AND EPIRRITA-AUTUMNATA (GEOMETRIDAE) [J].
AYRES, MP ;
MACLEAN, SF .
OIKOS, 1987, 48 (03) :273-279
[2]  
Barbosa P., 1988, P201
[3]   DOES FOLIAGE DAMAGE INFLUENCE PREDATION ON THE INSECT HERBIVORES OF BIRCH [J].
BERGELSON, JM ;
LAWTON, JH .
ECOLOGY, 1988, 69 (02) :434-445
[4]   ON THE EVOLUTION OF HOST SPECIFICITY IN PHYTOPHAGOUS ARTHROPODS [J].
BERNAYS, E ;
GRAHAM, M .
ECOLOGY, 1988, 69 (04) :886-892
[5]  
BOWERS M D, 1987, Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, V41, P131
[6]  
CAPINERA J L, 1980, Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society, V53, P631
[7]   ACTIVITY PATTERNS, BODY-TEMPERATURE AND THERMAL ECOLOGY IN 2 DESERT CATERPILLARS (LEPIDOPTERA-SPHINGIDAE) [J].
CASEY, TM .
ECOLOGY, 1976, 57 (03) :485-497
[9]   DEVELOPMENTAL-CHANGE IN AGGREGATION, DEFENSE AND ESCAPE BEHAVIOR OF BUCKMOTH CATERPILLARS, HEMILEUCA-LUCINA (SATURNIIDAE) [J].
CORNELL, JC ;
STAMP, NE ;
BOWERS, MD .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 1987, 20 (06) :383-388
[10]   LEAF QUALITY AND ENEMY AVOIDANCE BY THE LARVAE OF A PYRALID MOTH [J].
DAMMAN, H .
ECOLOGY, 1987, 68 (01) :88-97