Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA, USA.
Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, P.O. Box 519, Crested Butte, CO 81224, USA, USA.
Oecologia. 2000 Oct;125(2):186-200. doi: 10.1007/s004420000446. Epub 2014 Mar 3.
The supply of recruits plays an important role in plant and animal population dynamics, and may be governed by environmental and behavioral constraints on animals. Mated females of the mayfly genus Baetis alight on rocks protruding from streams, crawl under water and deposit a single egg mass under a rock. We surveyed oviposition and emergence of a bivoltine population of B. bicaudatus in multiple stream reaches in one high-altitude watershed in western Colorado over 3 years to establish qualitative patterns at a regional scale (entire watershed), and quantitative patterns over six generations at a local scale (one stream reach). We also measured characteristics of preferred oviposition substrates, performed experiments to test hypotheses about cues used by females to select oviposition sites, and measured mortality of egg masses in the field. Our goals were to determine whether: (1) hydrologic variation necessitated dispersal of females to find suitable oviposition sites; (2) the local supply of females could provide the supply of local recruits; and (3) local recruitment determined the local production of adults. The onset of oviposition corresponded with the decline of spring run-off, which differed dramatically among years and among sites within years. However, eggs appeared before any adults had emerged in 8 of 22 site-years, and adults emerged 2-3 weeks before any eggs were oviposited in 3 site-years. Furthermore, the size distribution of egg masses differed from that predicted by the size distribution of females that emerged from seven of nine stream reaches. Protruding rocks and eggs appeared earlier each summer in smaller tributaries than in larger mainstream reaches, suggesting that hydrologic and behavioral constraints on oviposition may force females to disperse away from their natal reach to oviposit, and possibly explain the predominantly upstream flight of Baetis females reported in other studies. Local oviposition rates in one third-order stream-reach increased rapidly as soon as substrates protruded from the water surface, and females preferred large rocks that became available early in the flight season. However, females oviposited on <10% of all available rocks, and <65% of preferred rocks as determined by an empirical model. These data indicated that the timing of appearance of suitable oviposition sites determined the phenology of local recruitment, but that preferred oviposition sites were not saturated. Thus, the magnitude of local recruitment was not limited by the absolute abundance of preferred oviposition sites. Only 22% of egg masses observed in the field suffered mortality during their embryonic development, and per capita Baetis egg mass mortality was significantly lower on rocks with higher densities of egg masses. Thus, we suspect that specialized oviposition behavior may reduce the probability of egg mortality, potentially compensating for the costs of dispersal necessary to locate suitable oviposition sites. Finally, the number of adults that emerged at one stream reach was independent of the number of egg masses oviposited over six generations of Baetis; and local recruitment was not a function of the number of adults of the previous generation that emerged locally. The patterns of oviposition and emergence of Baetis found in this study are consistent with the following hypotheses. Recruitment of eggs in a stream reach is not limited by the local supply of adults, but is a function of the regional supply of dispersing adults, which are constrained by the spatial and temporal distribution of preferred oviposition habitat. Furthermore, subsequent local production of adults is not a function of the supply of recruits, arguing for post-recruitment control of local populations by processes operating in the larval stage (e.g., predation, competition, dispersal, disturbance). Processes affecting larval and adult stages of Baetis act independently and at different scales, thereby decoupling local population dynamics of successive generations.
昆虫的繁殖对植物和动物种群动态起着重要作用,而动物的繁殖可能受到环境和行为因素的限制。蜉蝣目的交配后的雌蜉蝣降落在突出于溪流的岩石上,在水下爬行,并在岩石下产下单个卵块。我们在过去 3 年中对科罗拉多州西部一个高海拔流域的多个溪流河段的双态蜉蝣属蜉蝣 bicaudatus 进行了产卵和成虫出现的调查,以在区域尺度(整个流域)上建立定性模式,并在当地尺度(一个溪流河段)上建立六个世代的定量模式。我们还测量了首选产卵基质的特征,进行了实验以检验雌性选择产卵地点所使用的线索的假设,并在野外测量了卵块的死亡率。我们的目标是确定:(1)水文变化是否需要雌性扩散以找到合适的产卵地点;(2)当地雌性的供应是否可以提供当地的幼虫供应;(3)当地的幼虫供应是否决定了当地成虫的产量。产卵的开始与春季径流量的下降相对应,这在不同年份和同一年内的不同地点之间有很大差异。然而,在 22 个地点年中的 8 个地点,在任何成虫出现之前就出现了卵,而在 3 个地点年中,在任何卵被产下之前成虫就出现了 2-3 周。此外,卵块的大小分布与从 9 个溪流河段中出现的成虫的大小分布不同。在较小的支流中,突出的岩石和卵块每年都会更早出现,而在较大的主流河段中则不会,这表明产卵的水文和行为限制可能迫使雌性从其出生地扩散到其他地方产卵,这可能解释了在其他研究中报告的蜉蝣属雌性主要向上游飞行的现象。一条第三级溪流河段的当地产卵率在基质一旦从水面突出时就迅速增加,并且雌性更喜欢在飞行季节早期出现的大岩石。然而,雌性只在 <10%的可用岩石上产卵,而且在一个经验模型中,只有 <65%的首选岩石被产卵。这些数据表明,合适的产卵地点出现的时间决定了当地幼虫供应的物候学,但首选的产卵地点没有饱和。因此,当地幼虫供应的规模不受首选产卵地点绝对数量的限制。只有在野外观察到的 22%的卵块在胚胎发育过程中遭受了死亡率,并且具有较高卵块密度的岩石上的个体蜉蝣卵块死亡率明显较低。因此,我们怀疑专门的产卵行为可能会降低卵死亡率的概率,从而可能弥补找到合适的产卵地点所需的扩散成本。最后,一个溪流河段出现的成虫数量与六代蜉蝣的卵块数量无关;并且当地幼虫供应不是当地前一代成虫出现数量的函数。在这项研究中发现的蜉蝣属的产卵和出现模式与以下假设一致。一个溪流河段的幼虫供应不受当地成虫供应的限制,而是受扩散成虫的区域供应的限制,而扩散成虫的分布又受到首选产卵栖息地的空间和时间分布的限制。此外,当地成虫的后续产量不是幼虫供应的函数,这表明幼虫阶段(例如捕食、竞争、扩散、干扰)的过程对当地种群的后繁殖控制。影响蜉蝣幼虫和成虫阶段的过程独立且在不同的尺度上起作用,从而使连续几代的当地种群动态解耦。