Reich Paul, Downes Barbara J
School of Anthropology, Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Melbourne, 3010 Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Oecologia. 2003 Aug;136(3):465-75. doi: 10.1007/s00442-003-1284-6. Epub 2003 May 22.
Cues involved in determining the distribution of invertebrate propagules within a stream landscape contribute greatly to our knowledge of the supply and arrangement of new recruits and thus an improved understanding of factors that might ultimately affect population parameters. Previous observations indicated that both current velocity and rock size were important determinants of the egg mass distribution of certain hydrobiosid caddis flies that lay their eggs in single masses beneath emergent rocks. These observations were tested experimentally in a temperate, upland Australian stream. Manipulations of current speed confirmed that females of Ulmerochorema sp. and the Taschorema complex deposited more eggs on rocks in elevated current speeds (>0.40 ms(-1)) whereas Apsilochorema sp. deposited more eggs on rocks in slow currents (<0.30 ms(-1)). This latter result did not coincide with previous observational data. The anomaly between observational and experimental data, however, was reconciled by the outcome of a further experiment that tested the influence of the emergent or 'landing pad' size of rocks as the abundance of Apsilochorema egg masses increased with landing pad size independent of the prevailing flow conditions. Landing pad size did not influence the abundance of egg masses of Taschorema or Ulmerochorema. Patterns of female visits to rocks indicated that taxa might distinguish between favoured egg-laying sites prior to landing on rocks. Large aggregations of adult male and female Ulmerochorema collected from rocks favoured for oviposition provide indirect evidence for mating induced swarming behaviour associated with oviposition site selection. This study provides a framework for more sophisticated questions relating to the influence of oviposition site selection on structuring populations of lotic macroinvertebrates.
在确定溪流景观中无脊椎动物繁殖体分布时涉及的线索,极大地增进了我们对新个体供应和分布的了解,从而有助于更好地理解最终可能影响种群参数的因素。先前的观察表明,水流速度和岩石大小都是某些在露出水面的岩石下单个产卵的水栖毛翅目石蛾卵块分布的重要决定因素。这些观察结果在澳大利亚温带高地溪流中进行了实验验证。对水流速度的操控证实,乌尔默石蛾属(Ulmerochorema sp.)和塔氏石蛾复合体(Taschorema complex)的雌性在水流速度较高(>0.40米/秒)的岩石上产更多的卵,而阿氏石蛾属(Apsilochorema sp.)在水流缓慢(<0.30米/秒)的岩石上产更多的卵。后一结果与先前的观察数据不一致。然而,观察数据与实验数据之间的差异通过进一步实验的结果得到了解释,该实验测试了岩石露出水面部分或“着陆平台”大小的影响,因为随着着陆平台大小的增加,阿氏石蛾卵块的数量增加,且不受主流流动条件的影响。着陆平台大小并未影响塔氏石蛾或乌尔默石蛾卵块的数量。雌性对岩石的访问模式表明,不同分类单元在降落在岩石上之前可能会区分偏好的产卵地点。从有利于产卵的岩石上收集到的大量成年乌尔默石蛾雌雄聚集在一起,为与产卵地点选择相关的交配诱导群聚行为提供了间接证据。本研究为更复杂的问题提供了一个框架,这些问题涉及产卵地点选择对溪流大型无脊椎动物种群结构的影响。