The growth/predation risk trade-off: So what is the mechanism?

被引:171
作者
McPeek, MA [1 ]
机构
[1] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Biol Sci, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
关键词
activity; damselfly; digestion; growth; physiological response to predators; trade-off;
D O I
10.1086/382755
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Among damselflies in natural lakes, Ischnura species grow faster than coexisting Enallagma species, but Enallagma species have higher survival under predation than Ischnura species. This growth/predation risk trade-off apparently allows these taxa to coexist in ponds and lakes across the Holarctic. However, laboratory studies presented here show that the mechanism assumed by most theoretical and empirical studies to mediate this trade-off, namely activity simultaneously modulating foraging returns and predation risk, does not operate in this system. Ischnura verticalis larvae were more active than larvae of Enallagma species in a short-term behavioral experiment, which explains why Ischnura experiences greater mortality from predation. However, this greater activity did not translate into higher feeding rates. Ischnura verticalis and Enallagma species ate comparable amounts of food in both the short-term behavioral experiment and a longer feeding and digestion experiment. In spite of no difference in the amount of food ingested or assimilated, I. verticalis larvae grew faster than Enallagma larvae because they were better able to physiologically convert assimilated food into their own biomass in the presence of mortality threats. From these studies we understand the phenotypic mechanisms determining the antagonistic patterns of relative growth and survival between these two genera, but why these patterns exist remains unclear.
引用
收藏
页码:E88 / E111
页数:24
相关论文
共 117 条
[1]   THE EFFECTS OF ADAPTIVE-BEHAVIOR ON THE TYPE-2 FUNCTIONAL-RESPONSE [J].
ABRAMS, PA .
ECOLOGY, 1990, 71 (03) :877-885
[2]  
Abrams PA, 2003, EVOL ECOL RES, V5, P653
[3]   WHY PREDATION RATE SHOULD NOT BE PROPORTIONAL TO PREDATOR DENSITY [J].
ABRAMS, PA .
ECOLOGY, 1993, 74 (03) :726-733
[4]  
Abrams PA, 2002, EVOL ECOL RES, V4, P897
[5]   LIFE-HISTORY AND THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FOOD AVAILABILITY AND FORAGING EFFORT [J].
ABRAMS, PA .
ECOLOGY, 1991, 72 (04) :1242-1252
[6]   Effect of food and predators on the activity of four larval ranid frogs [J].
Anholt, BR ;
Werner, E ;
Skelly, DK .
ECOLOGY, 2000, 81 (12) :3509-3521
[7]   Predictable changes in predation mortality as a consequence of changes in food availability and predation risk [J].
Anholt, BR ;
Werner, EE .
EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY, 1998, 12 (06) :729-738
[8]   INTERACTION BETWEEN FOOD AVAILABILITY AND PREDATION MORTALITY MEDIATED BY ADAPTIVE-BEHAVIOR [J].
ANHOLT, BR ;
WERNER, EE .
ECOLOGY, 1995, 76 (07) :2230-2234
[9]  
[Anonymous], 1991, Evolutionary Biology of Aging
[10]   Aggressive interactions and risk of fish predation for larval damselflies [J].
Baker, RL ;
Elkin, CM ;
Brennan, HA .
JOURNAL OF INSECT BEHAVIOR, 1999, 12 (02) :213-223