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1.
Rita Covas Morné A. du Plessis Claire Doutrelant 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2008,63(1):103-112
Some studies on the effects of helpers in cooperatively breeding vertebrates show a positive effect of helper presence on
reproductive output whereas others find no effect. One possibility for this discrepancy is that helpers may have a positive
effect when breeding conditions are adverse, while their effect might go unnoticed under good conditions. We investigate this
hypothesis on sociable weavers Philetairus socius, a colonial cooperatively breeding passerine that inhabits a semi-arid region where breeding conditions vary markedly. We
used multivariate mixed models to analyse the effect of helpers on reproduction under contrasting environmental and social
conditions while controlling for parental and colony identity. We found that reproductive success in sociable weavers was
primarily influenced by nest predation and rainfall. In addition, colony size was negatively associated with hatching and
fledging success and number of young fledged per season. Helpers had a less prominent but significant influence on feeding
rates and reproductive outcome. In agreement with expectations, the presence of helpers counteracted some of the negative
effects of breeding in periods of low rainfall or in large colonies and was also associated with an increased number of young
fledged per season. Our results illustrate that the effect of helpers might be detectable mostly under unfavourable conditions,
but can contribute to improve reproductive performance in those situations. 相似文献
2.
Filippo Galimberti Simona Sanvito Chiara Braschi Luigi Boitani 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,62(2):159-171
Reproductive effort is a key parameter of life history because it measures the resources allocated to reproduction at the
expense of growth and maintenance. Male reproductive effort always had a minor role with respect to female effort both in
the development of theories and in field research. Elephant seals are an ideal subject for reproductive effort studies because
they fast during the breeding season, splitting the phase of energy acquisition from the phase of energy use for breeding.
In this paper, we present results on male reproductive effort (weight loss estimated by photogrammetry) in southern elephant
seals (Mirounga leonina), the most dimorphic and polygynous of all mammal species. We show that total reproductive effort increases with age, with
no sign of late decrease or senescence. Male reproductive effort in this species depends mostly on behavioral factors, i.e.,
the success in competition with other males, and the intensity of interaction with females. A large effort results in large
gains in both mating success and fertilizations. The large reproductive success that a few males are able to achieve come
at a big cost in terms of energy expenditure, but this cost does not seem to affect the likelihood of survival to the following
breeding season. 相似文献
3.
Female control of reproductive skew in cooperatively breeding brown jays (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Cyanocorax morio</Emphasis>) 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Brown jays (Cyanocorax morio) are long-lived, social corvids that live in large, stable, territorial groups (mean = 10 individuals). In this study, I determined the distribution of reproductive success within groups using multi-locus DNA fingerprinting. Breeding females produced virtually all (99%) of the young within their own nests. Reproduction within groups was highly skewed towards a single primary female, although long term data indicate that secondary females (female breeders that were usually younger and subordinate to the primary female) were sometimes successful. The high reproductive skew observed for females was associated with primary female aggression. Successful reproduction by secondary females may have been due to parental facilitation or the inability of primary females to completely suppress secondary females. Multiple paternity occurred in 31–43% of broods and extra-group paternity occurred in a minimum of 22% of broods. Patterns of paternity also varied between years, since females often switched or included new genetic mates. Although male consorts of nesting females fathered relatively few offspring (20%), they still had a higher chance of fathering offspring than any other single group male. Reproduction was less skewed for males than females as a result of female mating patterns. Female reproductive patterns are consistent with some of the predictions and assumptions from optimal skew models, while male reproductive patterns are not. The factors affecting skew in species with complex social systems such as incomplete control by breeders over subordinate reproduction, female control of paternity, and resource inheritance have not been well incorporated into reproductive skew models.Communicated by: J. Dickinson 相似文献
4.
Halictine bees exhibit a wide range of social behaviour that varies both inter- and intraspecifically. Although previous studies
suggested that the intraspecific variation might be attributed to temperature differences, there was no direct evidence to
detect the relationships between temperature and socialities. Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) baleicum exhibited solitary behaviour in a cooler locality (Kawakita) because of the shorter breeding season; in a warmer locality
(Nishioka Park), however, this bee species exhibited eusociality at sunny site and solitary behaviour at shady site, whereas
a molecular phylogeny confirms that all of these colonies are evidently conspecific. Therefore, we examined the effect of
degree-day accumulation on the sympatric social variation of L. baleicum by rearing the bees to calculate the threshold temperature. Whereas they showed high mortality, the threshold temperature
was estimated to be 10.33°C and the expected degree-day accumulation was 340 degree days. When we use this value of a degree-day
accumulation to estimate the expected eclosion date, the estimated dates were always consistent with observed eclosion dates.
In any sites where the bees were solitary, the degree-day accumulation was not enough for the second eclosion by the end of
the bee-active season. In Nishioka Park, sex ratio of the first brood was female biased, and daughters were smaller than mothers;
in Kawakita, however, there was no sex bias, and daughters were as large as their mothers indicating that the foundresses
seem to produce gyne-sized females in Kawakita but worker-sized females in Nishioka though these females do not become workers
at shady site. 相似文献
5.
Véronique Thériault Louis Bernatchez Julian J. Dodson 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,62(1):51-65
Salmonids are known for the occurrence in sympatry of two life-history forms, one that undergoes migration to sea before returning
to freshwater to reproduce (anadromous) and one that inhabits freshwater without a migration phase (resident). Whereas one
breeding population is often suggested by population genetic studies, mating patterns have rarely been directly assessed,
especially when both sexes are found within each life-history form. By using highly polymorphic microsatellite loci and parentage
analysis in a natural population of sympatric anadromous and resident brook charr (Salvelinus fontinalis), we found that gene flow occurred between the two forms and was mediated by resident males mating with both resident and
anadromous females. Determinants of reproductive success, estimated by the number of surviving juveniles (ages 1 and 2 years),
differed between the sexes. No strong evidence of the influence of size on individual reproductive success was found for males,
whereas larger females (and hence most likely to be anadromous) were more successful. The higher individual reproductive success
of anadromous fish compared to residents was mainly explained by this higher reproductive success of anadromous females. We
suggest that resident males adopt a “sneaking” reproductive tactic as a way of increasing their reproductive success by mating
with females of all sizes in all habitats. The persistence of the resident tactic among females may be linked to their advantage
in accessing spatially constrained spawning areas in small tributary streams unavailable to larger females. 相似文献
6.
Anita Aisenberg Carmen Viera Fernando G. Costa 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,62(1):29-35
Sexual selection theory predicts that a higher investment in offspring will turn females into the selective sex, while males
will compete for accessing and courting them. However, there are exceptions to the rule. When males present a high reproductive
investment, sex roles can reverse from typical patterns, turning males into the choosy sex, while females locate males and
initiate courtship. In many spiders, males are smaller than females, wandering in search of sedentary females and maximizing
the number of copulations. In the present study, we present findings on the sand-dwelling wolf spider, Allocosa brasiliensis, evidencing a reversal in typical courtship roles reported for the first time in spiders. Males were bigger than females.
Females located males and initiated courtship. Copulation always occurred in male burrows and took place mainly in long burrows.
Males donated their burrows to the females after copulation, closing the entrance before leaving with female cooperation from
inside. Males would provide females with a secure place for ovipositing, being exposed to predation and diminishing their
future mating possibilities until constructing a new burrow. The cost of vacating the burrow and losing the refuge in an unpredictable
habitat, such as sand dunes, would explain the courtship roles reversal in this spider species. Results turn A. brasiliensis as a promising model for discussing the determinants of sex roles and the pressures that drive their evolution and maintenance.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi: ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献
7.
Knowledge of the investment rules adopted by breeders and non-breeders, and the factors that affect them, is essential to
understanding cooperative breeding as part of a life-history tactic. Although the factors that affect relative contributions
to care of young have been studied in some cooperative bird species, there is little data on mammals, making coherent generalisations
within mammals and across taxa difficult. In this study, we investigate individual contributions to pup escorting, a strong
predictor of offspring provisioning, in the banded mongoose (Mungos mungo), a cooperatively breeding mammal in which reproductive skew is low. Contributions by those under a year old (which virtually
never breed) increased with age and body weight but were generally low. Among older age classes (yearlings and adults), individuals
that had not bred in the current litter generally contributed less to escorting than those that had bred (with the exception
of yearling males). In addition, females that did not breed reduced their investment if they were heavy presumably because
such females are more likely to breed in the following event and benefit from saving resources for this. The generally greater
contributions by breeders in banded mongooses contrast with the recent findings in meerkats (Suricata suricatta), another obligatorily cooperative mongoose with similar group size but wherein reproductive skew is high. Our results suggest
that relative contributions by breeders vs non-breeders are not dependent on group size but on the ratio of breeders to carers
and the probability that non-breeders will breed in the near future. 相似文献
8.
Martha M. Robbins Andrew M. Robbins Netzin Gerald-Steklis H. Dieter Steklis 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(6):919-931
Over the past few decades, socioecological models have been developed to explain the relationships between the ecological
conditions, social systems, and reproductive success of primates. Feeding competition, predation pressures, and risk of infanticide
are predicted to influence how female reproductive success (FRS) depends upon their dominance rank, group size, and mate choices.
This paper examines how those factors affected the reproductive success of female mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei) of the Virunga Volcanoes, Rwanda from 1967–2004. Reproductive success was measured through analyses of interbirth intervals,
infant survival, and surviving infant birth rates using data from 214 infants born to 67 females. Mountain gorillas were predicted
to have “within-group scramble” feeding competition, but we found no evidence of lower FRS in larger groups, even as those
groups became two to five times larger than the population average. The gorillas are considered to have negligible “within-group
contest” competition, yet higher ranked mothers had shorter interbirth intervals. Infant survival was higher in multimale
groups, which was expected because infanticide occurs when the male dies in a one-male group. The combination of those results
led to higher surviving birth rates for higher ranking females in multimale groups. Overall, however, the socioecological
factors accounted for a relatively small portion of the variance in FRS, as expected for a species that feeds on abundant,
evenly distributed foliage. 相似文献
9.
Individual-level variation in resource use occurs in a broad array of vertebrate and invertebrate taxa and may have important
ecological and evolutionary implications. In this study, we measured the degree of individual-level variation in prey preference
of the hunting wasp Trypoxylon albonigrum, which inhabits the Atlantic Forest in southeastern Brazil. This wasp captures several orb-weaving spider genera to provision
nests. Individuals consistently specialized on a narrow subset of the prey taxa consumed by the population, indicating the
existence of significant individual-level variation in prey preferences. The population niche was broader in the wet season
in terms of both prey size and taxa. In the case of prey size, the population niche expansion was achieved via increased individual
niche breadths, whereas in the case of prey taxa, individual niches remained relatively constrained, and the population niche
expanded via increased interindividual variation. The observed pattern suggests the possibility of functional trade-offs associated
with the taxon of the consumed prey. The nature of the trade-offs remains unknown, but they are likely related to learning
in searching and/or handling prey. We hypothesize that by specializing on specific prey taxa, individuals increase foraging
efficiency, reducing foraging time and ultimately increasing reproductive success. 相似文献
10.
We used a brood-size manipulation to test the effect of rearing environment on structural coloration of feathers grown by
eastern bluebird (Sialia sialis) nestlings. Ultraviolet (UV)-blue structural coloration has been shown to be sexually selected in this species. Our experimental
design took advantage of the growth of UV-blue wing feathers in nestlings that are retained as part of the first nuptial plumage.
We cross-fostered nestlings to create enlarged and reduced broods with the purpose of manipulating parental feeding rates
and measured the effect on nestling growth and plumage coloration. Brood size influenced feeding rates to offspring, but the
effect varied with season. In general, male nestlings reared in reduced broods were fed more often, weighed more, and displayed
brighter structural plumage compared to nestlings reared in enlarged broods. Female nestlings appeared to experience less
adverse affects of brood enlargement, and we did not detect an effect of brood-size manipulation on the plumage coloration
of female nestlings. Measures of plumage coloration in both males and females, however, were correlated to hatching date and
nestling mass during feather development. These data provide empirical evidence that environmental quality can influence the
development of the blue structural coloration of feathers and that males may be more sensitive to environmental fluctuations
than females. 相似文献
11.
Stephen T. Trumbo 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(11):1717-1723
A positive correlation between the parental effort of a male and female should promote stable biparental care. Risk-taking
(as assessed by injuries) against infanticidal intruders by Nicrophorus pustulatus females was expected to be low when females had a low probability of successful defense of the young. I tested the hypothesis
that when the presence of a male partner increased the probability of successful defense from low to moderate that female
risk-taking would increase. Single females and pairs with first instar larvae were confronted by potentially infanticidal
male and female conspecific intruders. Male intruders routinely took over nests from unpaired females (30 of 36 trials). Unpaired
females and male intruders were injured infrequently, indicating less intense fights despite the high probability of infanticide.
A resident female defending against a male intruder was injured more often when paired than unpaired, suggesting greater risk-taking.
A male parent that delays desertion, therefore, receives fitness benefits not only from his own defense of the young, but
from greater female defense against male intruders as well. It is hypothesized that the threat of infanticidal takeovers by
males promotes extended biparental care in burying beetles. When the intruder was female, on the other hand, a female parent
on her own had a moderate probability of successfully defending the brood (22 of 36 trials). The presence of a male partner
against female intruders almost guaranteed successful defense (35 of 36 trials) and female intruders did not appear to contest
pairs vigorously. Against female intruders the presence of a male partner did not significantly change injury rates of the
defending female. 相似文献
12.
A. Machias S. Somarakis N. Papadroulakis M.-T. Spedicato M. Suquet G. Lembo P. Divanach 《Marine Biology》2003,142(1):45-52
The wreckfish (Polyprion americanus) is a panoceanic, long-lived, deep-water demersal species, characterized by an extended pelagic juvenile phase associated with floating objects. In the present study morphometric data from 435 specimens collected from Greece (Crete), Italy (Ionian Sea) and the Atlantic coast of France from September 1999 to March 2001 were analyzed to estimate the settlement size of the species and associated changes in morphology. The fishery sample included specimens from both the pelagic and the demersal stage. Length-at-settlement (TL50) and 95% confidence intervals were estimated by fitting a logistic function. Eleven morphometric characters were analyzed, and the existing inflection points, reflecting alterations in body shape, were defined: (1) iteratively, as the transition point, splitting the data set into two groups, for which the reduced major axis functions, between a character and total length, of the successive groups best fit (minimum sum of squares of residuals) the combined data set and (2) where the second derivative of the fitted third-order polynomial functions to morphometric ratios equaled zero. The main size range within which wreckfish settled was 56-65 cm, and the means of the inflection points defined by the two methods were 61 and 64 cm. These results indicate changes in functional morphology associated with settlement. The monitoring of wreckfish juveniles caught in the wild and kept individually in captivity showed changes in growth and food intake at approximately the estimated settlement length and suggested that temperature was the most likely factor triggering settlement. 相似文献
13.
The experiments were undertaken to measure, for the first time, cardiac output in yellowtail (Seriola quinqueradiata) during exposure to a harmful red tide flagellate (Chattonella marina). The responses were compared with those during exposure to environmental hypoxia to evaluate the significance of the drop of arterial oxygen partial pressure (PaO2) in the fish-kill mechanisms by C. marina. PaO2 immediately decreased, whereas heart rate (HR) was maintained until shortly before death during exposure to C. marina. Suffocation developing during the exposure resulted from a decrease in blood oxygen content, but not from lowered blood flow to the tissue. Although exposure to both C. marina and hypoxia immediately decreased PaO2, arterial oxygen content (CaO2) and pH (pHa) were significantly lower, whereas HR and cardiac output (&Qdot;) remained significantly higher, for the C. marina-exposed fish than for hypoxia-exposed fish. Although the drop in PaO2 appears to play a pivotal role in the mechanisms of fish death by C. marina, other physiological response(s) should also be considered. 相似文献
14.
Masayo Soma Daichi S. Saito Toshikazu Hasegawa Kazuo Okanoya 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(11):1695-1705
Maternal effects, such as investment in eggs, have profound effects on offspring fitness. Mothers are expected to skew their
investment depending on the laying order and sex when unequal sibling competition occurs within a brood because of sex-specific
vulnerability and age hierarchy caused by asynchronous hatching. The Bengalese finch hatches asynchronously and shows a moderate
reversed sexual size dimorphism. However, contrary to commonly accepted assumptions of size-dependent vulnerability, the smaller
sex (male) is more vulnerable to developmental stress caused by sibling competition. We investigated whether maternal investment
would be biased by the position in laying order and the sex of eggs, and also explored the possible differences in growth
patterns depending on sex, laying order, and age hierarchy by observing chicks fostered to experimentally manipulated broods
where brood composition was controlled and age hierarchy was more enhanced than in natural breeding conditions. We found that
overall patterns of maternal investment favored the disadvantageous sectors of sibling competition, i.e., eggs of later laying
order and sons over those of early laying order and daughters. We also examined the effect of laying order on adult body size
and sex differences in growth patterns. When reared in the subordinate age hierarchy, females could compensate for the deficit
of decreased growth rate by taking longer to mature, whereas males could not. We suggest that this sex-specific growth pattern
could be the cause of sex differences in vulnerability to early developmental stress. 相似文献
15.
Short-term (3 h) changes in concentration of chlorophylls and their derivatives in stage V Pseudodiaptomus euryhalinus and their fecal material were followed by HPLC during a 24 h experiment. Copepodites were fed with the prasinophyte Tetraselmis suecica. Intact chlorophyll a and b were found in animals and fecal material and had similar dynamics of accumulation over time. The extent of transformation of chlorophyll a and b to colorless compounds was different with chlorophyll a being more extensively degraded. Additionally, several chlorophyll derivatives (pheophytin and pyropheophytin-like pigments) were found. Pyropheophytin a was the most abundant followed by pheophytin b, pheophytin a, and pheophorbide a. Relative amounts of pheopigments were different in copepodites and fecal material, and pheophytin a, pheophorbide a, and pheophytin b concentrations were low and variable. The amount of ingested chlorophyll recovered as chlorophyll a and its derivatives in fecal and copepodite pools was generally low (<5%), with one exception occurring after 9 h, when it accounted for >70%. These data suggest individual pheopigments are produced at different rates and that chemical or enzymatic mechanisms in the gut of copepodites act on the two chlorophylls in different ways. 相似文献
16.
Elizabeth A. Tibbetts 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(12):1877-1883
Social insects are popular models for studying the evolution of cooperation. Casteless taxa where individuals have the flexibility
to either nest alone or cooperate are particularly valuable for understanding the causes and consequences of cooperative behavior.
For example, some ‘workers’ from Polistes paper wasp nests disappear from their natal colony soon after pupal emergence and nest independently. However, little is
known about dispersal behavior. In this paper, I compare predispersal behavior of wasps who leave their natal colony soon
after emergence with behavior of individuals who remain on the natal colony as true workers. I found that P. dominulus females with short nest tenure behave much like gynes (reproductive-destined offspring produced at the end of the season),
as wasps with short nest tenure are behaviorally selfish while on the natal colony. They spend a smaller proportion of their
time foraging and a larger proportion of their time resting than workers with long nest tenure. In addition, I assessed the
factors that may favor early dispersal. Nest environment strongly influenced dispersal; large colonies had a smaller proportion
of females with short nest tenure. Queen turnover also increased dispersal behavior perhaps because queen turnover reduces
relatedness between a colony’s current and future offspring, thereby reducing the kin-selected benefits of cooperation. Therefore,
casteless social insects exhibit a surprising degree of reproductive flexibility. Individuals may use information about their
internal state and nest environment to optimize their behavioral strategies. 相似文献
17.
This paper presents data on the dispersal patterns and reproductive success of western lowland gorilla females from a long-term study at Mbeli Bai in the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park, Republic of Congo. We find that female natal and secondary transfer is common. Female immigration rates are negatively related to group size, and emigration rates are positively related to group size, with the net result that larger groups are losing females and smaller groups are gaining females. Furthermore, females transferring between known groups show a preference for significantly smaller groups. However, there is no effect of group size on female reproductive success. Male protection and male quality are considered important in determining female transfer decisions. The case for infanticide is argued and females exhibit strategies that appear to minimise the probability of infanticide following the death of the silverback. Exclusively single-male groups and group formation through female acquisition by solitary males may bias female transfer to lone silverbacks and small groups. The effects of group size on female dispersal and reproductive success are not wholly consistent with an argument for increased foraging costs, and group size effects are more parsimoniously explained by demographic factors. Male protection from intra-group aggression is the most likely factor underlying grouping patterns across gorilla taxa, but differences in population structure and male reproductive strategies may account for inter-specific variation. We stress the need for intra-specific comparisons and more complete data sets on western lowland gorilla feeding behaviour.Communicated by S. Boinski 相似文献
18.
Bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) are attracted to those particular inflorescences where other bees are already foraging, a process known as local enhancement.
Here, we use a quantitative analysis of learning in a foraging task to illustrate that this attraction can lead bees to learn
more quickly which flower species are rewarding if they forage in the company of experienced conspecifics. This effect can
also be elicited by model bees, rather than live demonstrators. We also show that local enhancement in bumblebees most likely
reflects a general attraction to conspecifics that is not limited to a foraging context. Based on the widespread occurrence
of both local enhancement and associative learning in the invertebrates, we suggest that social influences on learning in
this group may be more common than the current literature would suggest and that invertebrates may provide a useful model
for understanding how learning processes based on social information evolve. 相似文献
19.
Susanna Andersson 《Chemoecology》2003,13(1):13-20
Summary. To better understand the biological role of floral scents for
butterflies, electrophysiological responses to floral scents were
investigated using combined gas chromatography and electroantennographic
detection (GC-EAD). The antennal responses of three butterfly species,
Aglais urticae L. (Nymphalidae), Inachis io L. (Nymphalidae), and
Gonepteryx rhamni L. (Pieridae) to floral scent compounds from both
natural and synthetic mixtures were examined. Floral scents were
collected from the butterfly nectar plants Cirsium arvense (L.)
(Asteraceae), and Buddleja davidii Franchet cv. (Loganicaeae) with
dynamic head-space methods on Tenax-GR and eluted with pentane. These
eluates, composed of natural floral scent blends, represent an array of
compounds in their natural state. In the GC-EAD analyses eleven
compounds were identified from C. arvense with the benzenoid compound
phenylacetaldehyde in highest abundance. Seventeen compounds were
identified from B. davidii with the irregular terpene oxoisophorone in
highest abundance. Thirty-nine synthetic floral scent compounds were
mixed in pentane, in equal amounts; about 35 ng were allowed to reach
the antennae. The butterflies showed antennal responses to most of the
floral scent compounds from both natural and synthetic blends except to
the highly volatile monoterpene alkenes. Certain benzenoid compounds
such as phenylacetaldehyde, monoterpenes such as linalool, and irregular
terpenes such as oxoisophorone, were emitted in relatively large amounts
from C. arvense and B. davidii, and elicited the strongest antennal
responses. These compounds also elicited strong antennal responses when
present in the synthetic scent blends. Thus, the butterflies seem to
have many and /or sensitive antennal receptors for these compounds,
which points to their biological importance. Moreover, these compounds
are exclusively of floral scent origin. For B. davidii, which depends
highly on butterflies for pollination, the exclusive floral scent
compounds emitted in high abundance could be the result of an adaptive
pressure to attract butterflies.
Received 2 Septemter 2001; accepted 9 September 2002. 相似文献
20.
Phylogenetic analyses have demonstrated that nonfeeding larvae have evolved from feeding larvae many times among marine invertebrates.
In light of this observation, it is surprising that an intermediate strategy, a larva that can feed but is provisioned with
enough energy to metamorphose without acquiring exogenous food (i.e., facultative planktotrophy), is rare. A hypothesis for
the lack of facultative planktotrophic species among marine invertebrates is that the transition from feeding to nonfeeding
is rapid due to this intermediate stage being evolutionarily unstable. Evidence that would support this hypothesis is if species
with facultative planktotrophy have reduced food assimilation when compared with obligate planktotrophs. We studied a species
with facultative planktotrophic larvae, Clypeaster rosaceus, that is very near the boundary between facultative and obligatory planktotrophy, to answer two questions: (1) does feeding
during the larval stage result in energy gains in larval or juvenile stages and (2) if not, are larvae capable of assimilating
exogenous food at all. Our measurements of energetics in larval and juvenile stages show that C. rosaceus larvae accumulate very little if any energy when fed, but stable isotope data indicate that larvae are able to assimilate
some food. Our results are consistent with similar studies on facultative planktotrophic larvae suggesting poor food assimilation
and rapid loss of larval feeding after a population evolves the ability to reach metamorphosis without feeding (lecithotrophy). 相似文献