The reproductive life history of the predacious, sand-burrowing mayfly Dolania americana (Ephemeroptera: Behningiidae) and comparisons with other mayflies

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY(2011)

引用 7|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Oogenesis in Dolania is unique among Ephemeroptera, with one oocyte developing per ovariole, low numbers of ovarioles, and routine resorption of one-third to one-half of ovarioles. Fecundity is 20 times smaller than in mayflies from other families, and mature egg dry weight is approximately 32 times the values of non-Behningiidae mayflies. Seventy percent of the linear growth of maturing oocytes occurs in a 2- to 3-week period during the late penultimate to early final larval stadia. The gut does not atrophy fully, and nonmaturing oocytes remain small and are not resorbed until the other oocytes reach maturity. Thus, resorbing oocytes are probably not an important energy source for the maturing oocytes. Starvation can further reduce Dolania fecundity from a normal 100 eggs to 6. Limited oocyte resorption appears common in mayflies. Callibaetis ferrugineus female imagos, which are ovoviviparous, resorb much of their abdominal muscle. Some ovulation and even egg development may occur in the adult stage of many oviparous species. The thick chorion and thick, sticky fibrous suprachorionic layer of Dolania's egg probably resist damage from sand and fungi for nearly 1 year in a coarse rolling sand habitat. The large egg produces a well-developed first-instar larva 2.5-5 times the length of any other mayfly first instar. The reproductive strategy of Dolania and Behningia, unlike that of other mayflies, is to produce large eggs and thereby large predatory early-instar larvae capable of exploiting a large size range of prey.
更多
查看译文
关键词
life history,dry weight
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要