COMPLEX INTERACTIONS BETWEEN BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC FACTORS - EFFECTS ON MYCOPHAGOUS FLY COMMUNITIES

被引:17
作者
WORTHEN, WB [1 ]
MAYROSE, S [1 ]
WILSON, RG [1 ]
机构
[1] ERSKINE COLL,DEPT BIOL,DUE WEST,SC 29639
关键词
D O I
10.2307/3546148
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We measured the direct and interactive effects of larval density, ant predation, and soil moisture on larval survival and community structure of mycophagous flies. First instar larvae of a brown-eyed Drosophila tripunctata mutant were added to Agaricus bisporus mushrooms (10, 20 or 40 larvae/mushroom). The mushrooms were placed on dry. moist, or wet soil in ant-access and ant-exclusion treatment cups. The cups were placed in a woodland for 5 days where they were available to native flies for oviposition. We used ANOVA and MANOVA to measure the effects of our independent variables on the percentage of mutant larvae completing development and the number and diversity of native metamorphs. Ants visited wet soils (30% visited) more frequently than moist (20% visited) or dry soils (10% visited). and had stronger negative effects on larval survivorship and native metamorph abundance in wet and moist microenvironments. For example. ant predation reduced metamorph abundance by 60% on wet soil. 30% on moist soil, and only 8% on dry soil. Community composition also changed with soil moisture: a phorid (Dohrniphora sp.) dominated the dry soil mushrooms (49% of metamorphs). whereas drosophilids were more abundant in mushrooms on moist (63%) and wet soils (74%). The relatively low larval densities used in this experiment had no effect on either survivorship or diversity. Larval survivorship and community structure were influenced more by the direct and interactive effects between predation and microclimate than by competitive interactions among flies.
引用
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页码:277 / 286
页数:10
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