Relationships Between Habitat Preferences, Feeding, Life Cycles of Aquatic Insects & Stream Health...
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Transcript of Relationships Between Habitat Preferences, Feeding, Life Cycles of Aquatic Insects & Stream Health...
Relationships Between Habitat Preferences, Feeding, Life Cycles of Aquatic Insects & Stream
Health Relationships Between Habitat Preferences, Feeding, Life Cycles of Aquatic Insects & Stream
Health
Dr. Robert BohananUniversity of Wisconsin - Madison
Center for Biology [email protected]
Homage to Santa Rosalia orWhy are there so many different kinds of animals?
G. E. Hutchinson, 1959
“… Vast numbers of Corixidae were living in the water. At first I was rather disappointed because every specimen of the two species present was a female, and so lacking in most critical diagnostic features, while both sexes of the second slightly smaller species were present in about equal number. … The larger C. punctata was clearly at the end of its breeding season, the smaller C. affinis was probably just beginning to breed. This is the sort of observation than any naturalist can and does make all the time. It was not until I asked myself why the larger species should breed first, and then the more general question as to why there should be 2 and not 20 or 200 species of the genus in the pond, that ideas suitable to present to you began to emerge. These ideas prompted the very general question as to why there are such an enormous number of animal species.”
Aquatic Insects Inhabit Virtually Every Possible Freshwater Habitat
• What are some of the factors that might explain why insects have been so successful in freshwater?– Evolutionary history– Morphology– Physiology– Behavior– Development
What living and non-living factors could influence the successful development of an organism from
an egg to a sexually reproducing adult in a stream?
How might habitat selection affect the life history of an aquatic insect?
• Substrate for attachment and or shelter• Food availability (quality and quantity)• Range of current• Water temperature and Oxygen• Presence and relative abundance of other organisms• Others?
Stream
Order
Organic Energy Sources
Ecological Communities
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
101112
Coarse Particulate Organic Matter
Periphyton
Fine Particulate Organic Matter
Phytoplankton
Zooplankton
Dissolved Organic Matter
ShreddersGrazersPredatorsCollectorsMicrobes
CollectorsShreddersPredatorsGrazersMicrobes
CollectorsPredatorsMicrobes
Channel Width
Table 2. Substrate Type Abundance (#/m2) # of SpeciesSand 920 61Gravel 1300 82Pebbles & Cobble 2130 76Leaves 3480 92Detritus 5680 66
Graphic presentation of Table 2.
Abun
dance
(# /
square
mete
r)
(x)
# o
f specie
s (o)
Sand Gravel Pebbles & Cobble Leaves Detritus
o
oo
o
o
xx
x
x
x
Where’s the Mayfly?
Most Aquatic Insects Include a Sexually Mature Winged Adult
Mayfly Instars
Determining Instars
Adaptations?
Strong Swimmers
Burrowing and Clinging
Staying Out of the Current
Common Mayfly Habitat Preferences
• Baetidae
• Heptageniidae
• Caenidae
• Slow - Fast Current, Pools-Riffles, Variety of Substrate
• Slow-Fast Current, Often in Cobble, Logs, Submersed Vegetation, Leaf Packs
• Slower Current, Sediments
Rare Mayfly Habitat Preferences
• Ephemeridae
• Ephemerellidae
• Leptohyphidae
• Potamanthidae
• Isonychidae
• Slower Current, Sand and Silt
• Smaller, Cooler Streams, Leaf Packs
• Slower Current, Variety of Substrates
• Slower Current, Larger Streams, Gravel, Cobble
• Faster Current, Variety of Substrate
Mayfly Life History
• Baetidae• Heptageniidae• Caenidae• Ephemeridae• Ephemerellidae• Leptohyphidae• Potamanthidae• Isonychidae
• Often Bivoltine• Mostly Univoltine• Likely Univoltine• Univoltine, some Semivoltine• Univoltine• Univoltine, some Bivoltine/Multi• Univoltine• Bivoltine, some Univoltine
Trichoptera
Living Free
Filter Feeding Using Nets
How do caddisflies share what may be limited resources?
• Habitat selection• Substrate preferences• Resource partitioning
– Shredders– Filterers– Collectors– Predators
Portable Cases
Cases that mimic
Using Available Materials
Square Cases
Using Minerals and Organic Materials
Common Caddisfly Habitat Preferences
• Hydropsychidae
• Limnephilidae
• Hydroptilidae
• Helicopsychidae
• Moderate-Fast Current, Cobble, Gravel, Submersed Vegetation
• Slow-Fast Current, Submersed Vegetation, Cobble, Gravel, Sand, Detritus
• Variety, Submersed Vegetation
• Variety, Sand
Rare Caddisfly Habitat Preferences
• Uenoidae
• Brachycentridae
• Glossosomatidae
• Psychomyiidae
• Philopotamidae
• Phryganeidae
• Smaller Streams, Cobble
• Often Smaller, Cooler Streams, Submersed Vegetation, Cobble, Gravel
• Smaller, Cooler Streams, Cobble
• Smaller, Cooler Streams, Cobble, Logs
• Small-Large, Cool-Warm, Cobble, Logs
• Variety, Slower Current, Submersed Vegetation
Caddisfly Life History
• Hydropsychidae• Limnephilidae• Hydroptilidae• Helicopsychidae• Uenoidae• Brachycentridae• Glossosomatidae• Psychomyiidae• Philopotamidae• Phryganeidae
• Univoltine, some Bivoltine-Semi• Univoltine• Univoltine, some Bivoltine• Univoltine, some Bivoltine• Likely Univoltine• Semivoltine, some Univoltine• Univoltine• Likely Univoltine• Univoltine• Univoltine
Territoriality and Foraging
• Caddisfly larvae include case-building species
• Larvae scrape algae from the surface of rocks in streams and rivers
• What is the relationship of territory size and larval growth?
Why Build Cases?
• Tube-shaped cases appear in Diptera (above) and in Trichoptera (below)
Case building in some insect larvae reduces encounter rates and mortality
• Some case building species had reduced encounter frequency than did some non-case building species
• Lower encounter frequency also resulted in lower mortality of case builders compared to non-case builders
Evolutionarily, why do some species build cases and others not?
• Cases may not be adaptive, may be a byproduct
• Cases may be adaptive, but for some species the costs may exceed the benefits
• What are some potential costs?
Evolutionary Costs of Case Construction
• Building additional cases increases larval mortality
• Building additional cases prolongs larval development
• Building additional cases as larvae reduces the number of eggs in adult females