Delayed egg hatching and semivoltinism in the nearctic stonefly <i>Megarcys signata</i> (Plecoptera:Perlodidae)
Abstract
Delayed egg hatching can influence the survival of aquatic insects by reducing exposure to competi- tors, predators, parasites, or unfavorable environmental conditions. We examined egg development in a Colorado population of the stonefly, Megarcys signata (Plecoptera: Perlodidae), whose larvae in- habit high altitude streams in the Rocky Mountains of western North America. Five-thousand ferti- lized eggs were collected from 40 different females and incubated in the East River, Gunnison County, Colorado, until late fall, at which time unhatched eggs were transported to incubation chambers in Ithaca, New York. We used three different combinations of photoperiod and temperature (10L:14D, 4°C; 10L:14D, 8°C; 8L:16D, 8°C) in an attempt to induce hatching. Eggs in the treatments with temperatures elevated above normal winter temperatures in the East River (8°C) began developing after 6 months, whereas eggs in the treatment most closely simulating natural stream conditions (4°C) did not hatch after 10 months of incubation. Our data indicate that this population of Megarcys signata has an extended egg stage that persists for almost a year, and that it is semivoltine at these elevations of 2885 and 2895 meters.
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