Strauss Tido, Gerhard Jana, Gerth Daniel, Koch Josef, Ottermanns Richard, Vaugeois Maxime, Galic Nika
gaiac Research Institute Aachen Germany.
Institute for Environmental Research, RWTH Aachen University Aachen Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2025 Aug 13;15(8):e71949. doi: 10.1002/ece3.71949. eCollection 2025 Aug.
Density-dependent processes are important for a fundamental understanding of population regulation, as well as for understanding responses to and recovery from stressors. While exploitative competition is well-studied, interference competition is rather difficult to investigate, but it has been regularly observed to occur in many aquatic insect populations. We conducted laboratory experiments with the non-biting midge (Diptera: Chironomidae) to investigate the impact of different combinations of food supply and larval densities on development and mortality at a constant temperature of 20°C. The chosen two-factorial experimental design allowed a separate evaluation of exploitative (food) and interference (mortality) competition across a gradient of larval densities. The use of different vessel sizes between 50 cm and 600 cm made it possible to quantify the functional response at different food densities. To test mechanistic explanations for the statistically significant empirical relationships found in this study and to predict density-dependent processes, we used a dynamic process-oriented modeling approach. We extended a recently developed DEB-IBM full life cycle model for and successfully applied it under variable food conditions at the population level under laboratory conditions. Our study showed that chironomid development and reproduction are primarily dependent on food supply, whereas larval density drives the density-dependent mortality rate. The interaction of food availability and interference competition determined the effective mortality over time. Killing by conspecifics was the most likely mechanism responsible for the intraspecific mortality of the larval stages. Combining data generated using a tailor-made experimental design with a mechanistic model provided insights into and quantified regulation mechanisms of chironomid populations, allowing future uses of this information in the context of population-level risk assessment from exposure to chemicals.
密度依赖过程对于从根本上理解种群调节以及理解对压力源的反应和恢复至关重要。虽然剥削性竞争已得到充分研究,但干扰性竞争却相当难以调查,但人们经常观察到它在许多水生昆虫种群中发生。我们用摇蚊(双翅目:摇蚊科)进行了实验室实验,以研究在20°C恒温下食物供应和幼虫密度的不同组合对发育和死亡率的影响。所选择的两因素实验设计允许在幼虫密度梯度上分别评估剥削性(食物)和干扰性(死亡率)竞争。使用50厘米至600厘米之间的不同容器大小使得量化不同食物密度下的功能反应成为可能。为了检验对本研究中发现的具有统计学意义的经验关系的机制性解释,并预测密度依赖过程,我们使用了一种面向动态过程的建模方法。我们扩展了最近开发的用于摇蚊的DEB-IBM全生命周期模型,并在实验室条件下的种群水平上成功地将其应用于可变食物条件。我们的研究表明,摇蚊的发育和繁殖主要取决于食物供应,而幼虫密度驱动着密度依赖的死亡率。食物可利用性和干扰性竞争的相互作用决定了随时间变化的有效死亡率。同种个体间的杀戮是幼虫阶段种内死亡率最可能的机制。将使用量身定制的实验设计生成的数据与一个机制模型相结合,为摇蚊种群的调节机制提供了见解并进行了量化,从而使这些信息在未来用于从接触化学物质进行种群水平风险评估的背景中。