Beck Michael W, Connor Edward F
Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Clark Hall, 22903, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Blandy Experimental Farm, P.O. Box 175, 22620, Boyce, VA, USA.
Oecologia. 1992 Nov;92(2):287-295. doi: 10.1007/BF00317377.
To examine the importance of covariance between stages in traits related to foraging, we quantified the relationships between reproductive success and sizerelated variability in weight gain in juvenile and adult instars of the crab spider Misumenoides formosipes (Araneae: Thomisidae). Prereproductive weight and fecundity are both highly correlated with carapace width, a linear measure of size which does not change within an instar. In field populations, adult females with larger carapaces gain more weight and are more likely to reproduce than females with smaller carapaces. The growth rate of spiders fed ad libitum in the laboratory is unrelated to size, suggesting that size-related differences in the field are due to variation in prey-capture success. Adult females with a carapace width less than 3.4 mm comprised 22% of the population, but were never found to reproduce. Of the individuals that did reproduce, a 17% increase in carapace width resulted in a 100% increase in fecundity. Juvenile stages must be examined to understand adult foraging and reproductive success, because the net weight gained by juvenile instars determines adult size. The final weight gained by spiders in the antepenultimate and penultimate instars explained nearly all the variation in carapace width in the penultimate and adult instars, respectively. We found that constraints on foraging in late juvenile stages are different from the adult stage. Penultimate foraging behavior differs from that of adults, because of constraints on foraging in the period preceding ecdysis. Additionally, in both late juvenile instars, carapace width had little or no effect on the final weight gained within the instar suggesting that factors that affect foraging are different between the juvenile and adult stages. These analyses stress the fact that to fully understand the effects of foraging on reproductive success, we must examine stage-specific constraints throughout an organism's life history.
为了研究与觅食相关的性状中各发育阶段之间协方差的重要性,我们量化了蟹蛛(曲腹蛛科:花蛛属)幼蛛和成蛛龄期的繁殖成功率与体重增加的大小相关变异性之间的关系。繁殖前体重和繁殖力都与头胸甲宽度高度相关,头胸甲宽度是大小的线性度量,在一个龄期内不会改变。在野外种群中,头胸甲较大的成年雌性比头胸甲较小的雌性体重增加更多,繁殖的可能性也更大。在实验室中自由采食的蜘蛛的生长速率与大小无关,这表明野外与大小相关的差异是由于捕食成功率的变化所致。头胸甲宽度小于3.4毫米的成年雌性占种群的22%,但从未发现它们繁殖。在进行繁殖的个体中,头胸甲宽度增加17%会导致繁殖力增加100%。必须研究幼蛛阶段才能理解成年蜘蛛的觅食和繁殖成功率,因为幼蛛龄期获得的净体重决定了成年蜘蛛的大小。蜘蛛在倒数第三龄期和倒数第二龄期获得的最终体重分别解释了倒数第二龄期和成年龄期头胸甲宽度几乎所有的变异性。我们发现,幼蛛晚期对觅食的限制与成年阶段不同。倒数第二龄期的觅食行为与成年蜘蛛不同,这是由于蜕皮前时期对觅食的限制所致。此外,在两个幼蛛晚期龄期,头胸甲宽度对龄期内获得的最终体重几乎没有影响,这表明影响觅食的因素在幼蛛和成年阶段有所不同。这些分析强调了这样一个事实,即要全面理解觅食对繁殖成功率的影响,我们必须研究生物体整个生命史中特定阶段的限制因素。