Yee Donald A, Kesavaraju Banugopan, Juliano Steven A
Department of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, IL 61790-4120.
Ann Entomol Soc Am. 2004 Jul 1;97(4):720-728. doi: 10.1603/0013-8746(2004)097[0720:IDIFBA]2.0.CO;2.
Aedes albopictus has replaced Aedes aegypti in much of the latter species' historic range within the United States. The leading hypothesis for this displacement is exclusion via resource competition; however, the proximate mechanism producing a competitive advantage for A. albopictus over A. aegypti has not been identified. We performed laboratory experiments to test the hypotheses that these species differ in feeding behavior, and that these differences result in differences in survival when resources are scarce. Differences in feeding behavior were assessed in three environments with food (growing microorganisms) available: 1) in fluid only; 2) on leaf surfaces only; 3) or both in fluid and on leaf surfaces. We determined behavior of larvae in these environments, recording their positions (bottom, wall, leaf, top, or middle) and activities (browsing, filtering, resting, or thrashing) using instantaneous scan censuses. A. albopictus spent significantly more time at leaf surfaces, whereas A. aegypti spent more time engaging in nonfeeding activities. Both species showed a significant shift in foraging activity toward leaves when leaves were available. In a second experiment, we recorded survivorship for individuals raised in two treatment combinations: whole or half 17-mm disks of live oak leaves, with or without direct access to the leaf surface (controlled using nylon mesh, which allowed movement of microscopic organisms, but prevented mosquito larva movement between container sides). After 31 d, survivorship of A. albopictus was significantly greater than that of A. aegypti regardless of treatments. Moreover, A. albopictus showed significantly greater survivorship compared with A. aegypti when deprived of access to leaf surfaces and in whole leaf disk treatments, suggesting superior resource-harvesting ability for A. albopictus. Our experiments suggest that differences in foraging behavior contribute to the competitive advantage of A. albopictus over A. aegypti that has been observed in North America.
白纹伊蚊已在美国许多埃及伊蚊的历史分布范围内取而代之。关于这种取代现象的主要假说是通过资源竞争实现的排斥;然而,尚未确定对白纹伊蚊比对埃及伊蚊产生竞争优势的直接机制。我们进行了实验室实验,以检验以下假说:这两个物种在摄食行为上存在差异,并且这些差异在资源稀缺时会导致生存差异。在有食物(生长的微生物)的三种环境中评估摄食行为差异:1)仅在液体中;2)仅在叶片表面;3)或在液体和叶片表面两者。我们确定了幼虫在这些环境中的行为,使用即时扫描普查记录它们的位置(底部、壁面、叶片、顶部或中间)和活动(觅食、过滤、休息或挣扎)。白纹伊蚊在叶片表面停留的时间明显更长,而埃及伊蚊则花更多时间进行非摄食活动。当有叶片时,两个物种的觅食活动都显著向叶片转移。在第二个实验中,我们记录了在两种处理组合下饲养的个体的存活率:完整或半片17毫米的活橡树叶圆盘,有无直接接触叶片表面(使用尼龙网控制,尼龙网允许微生物移动,但阻止蚊虫幼虫在容器两侧之间移动)。31天后,无论处理如何,白纹伊蚊的存活率都显著高于埃及伊蚊。此外,当无法接触叶片表面以及在整片叶片圆盘处理中时,白纹伊蚊的存活率与埃及伊蚊相比显著更高,这表明白纹伊蚊具有更强的资源获取能力。我们的实验表明,觅食行为的差异促成了在北美观察到的白纹伊蚊对埃及伊蚊的竞争优势。