Dragonfly predators influence biomass and density of pond snails

被引:0
作者
Andrew M. Turner
Michael F. Chislock
机构
[1] Clarion University,Department of Biology
来源
Oecologia | 2007年 / 153卷
关键词
Food webs; Predation; Gastropoda; Odonata; Snail;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Studies in lakes show that fish and crayfish predators play an important role in determining the abundance of freshwater snails. In contrast, there are few studies of snails and their predators in shallow ponds and marshes. Ponds often lack fish and crayfish but have abundant insect populations. Here we present the results of field surveys, laboratory foraging trials, and an outdoor mesocosm experiment, testing the hypothesis that insects are important predators of pulmonate snails. In laboratory foraging trials, conducted with ten species of insects, most insect taxa consumed snails, and larval dragonflies were especially effective predators. The field surveys showed that dragonflies constitute the majority of the insect biomass in fishless ponds. More focused foraging trials evaluated the ability of the dragonflies Anax junius and Pantala hymenaea to prey upon different sizes and species of pulmonate snails (Helisoma trivolvis, Physa acuta, and Stagnicola elodes). Anax junius consumed all three species up to the maximum size tested. Pantala hymenaea consumed snails with a shell height of 3 mm and smaller, but did not kill larger snails. P. acuta were more vulnerable to predators than were H. trivolvis or S. elodes. In the mesocosm experiment, conducted with predator treatments of A. junius, P. hymenaea, and the hemipteran Belostoma flumineum, insect predators had a pronounced negative effect on snail biomass and density. A. junius and B. flumineum reduced biomass and density to a similar degree, and both reduced biomass more than did P. hymenaea. Predators did not have a strong effect on species composition. A model suggested that A. junius and P. hymenaea have the largest effects on snail biomass in the field. Given that both pulmonate snails and dragonfly nymphs are widespread and abundant in marshes and ponds, snail assemblages in these water bodies are likely regulated in large part by odonate predation.
引用
收藏
页码:407 / 415
页数:8
相关论文
共 83 条
[1]  
Benoy GA(2002)Patterns of habitat and invertebrate diet overlap between tiger salamanders and ducks in prairie potholes Hydrobiologia 481 47-59
[2]  
Nudds TD(1992)Leech predation on juvenile freshwater snails: effects of size, species, and substrate Oecologia 91 526-529
[3]  
Dunlop E(1986)Interactions between the leech Oecologia 69 268-276
[4]  
Brönmark C(1992) and its gastropod prey Ecology 73 1662-1674
[5]  
Brönmark C(1980)Indirect effects of predation in a freshwater benthic food chain J Herpetol 14 1-6
[6]  
Malmqvist B(1985)Food habits of sympatric larval Oecologia 66 93-99
[7]  
Brönmark C(1976) and J Herpetol 10 187-204
[8]  
Klosiewski SP(1999)Predation and the distribution and abundance of a pond snail Am Nat 154 571-586
[9]  
Stein RA(2003)An analysis of the feeding ecology of the salamanders (Amphibia: Urodela) of the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire Oikos 101 187-195
[10]  
Brophy T(2000)To grow or to reproduce? The role of life-history plasticity in food web dynamics Evol Ecol Res 2 129-148