Caddisfly behavioral responses to drying cues in temporary ponds: Implications for effects of climate change
Abstract
Aquatic organisms that live at high latitudes and elevations are especially vulnerable to climate-change-induced alterations in snowpack, snowmelt, and evaporation rates, all of which affect basin filling and drying dates. Extraordinarily early drying events in shallow ponds and wetlands at our study sites prompted us to conduct 2 mesocosm experiments to document how proximate cues of drying modify agonistic behaviors among larvae of the caddisfly, Asynarchus nigriculus. Larvae are mainly detritivores but can be extremely aggressive and engage in mob cannibalism, perhaps to obtain a dietary supplement that hastens escape from drying basins. In one experiment, we manipulated caddisfly density to simulate the effects of crowding during pond drying. In a 2nd experiment, we reduced water levels and manipulated a protein supplement that mimics the dietary benefits of cannibalism. We quantified the effects of those manipulations on aggressive behaviors that are precursors to cannibalism and on development time to pupation. Frequency and duration of agonistic encounters increased as a function of larval density and, independent of density, were higher in drying than nondrying treatments, especially in the absence of a protein supplement. Pupation occurred earlier in high- than low-density treatments and earlier with than without a protein supplement. In contrast, the timing of pupation was not accelerated in drying compared with nondrying treatments, which might reflect the extreme diel temperature fluctuations in drying ponds, hence suboptimal growth conditions. Our findings provide evidence that declining water levels and crowding serve as cues that enable caddisflies to adjust behavior and development in the face of habitat drying. Early drying events observed in recent years may exceed the limits of this flexibility and portend the demise of populations in temporary habitats that historically supported this species.
Local Knowledge Graph (22 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Increased aggression among <i>Asynarchus nigriculus</i> caddisfly larvae in a rapidly drying environment
Larval cannibalism, time constraints, and adult fitness in caddisflies that inhabit temporary wetlands
Diet and a developmental time constraint alter life-history trade-offs in a caddis fly (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae)
Data from: Elevational cline in herbivore abundance driven by a monotonic increase in trophic level sensitivity to aridity
Facilitation strength across environmental and beneficiary trait gradients in stream communities
Data from: Two-year bee, or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season length in a high-elevation solitary bee
Some Factors Historically Affecting The Distribution and Abundance of Fishes In The Gunnison River
A New Hydrologic Perspective of How Beaver Ponds Function
Small Mammals: A Beaver Pond Ecosystem and Adjacent Riparian Habitat in Idaho
Cited By (42 times, 13 in Knowledge Hub)
Quantifying physiological and behavioral differences in caddisfly larvae
Contrasting short-and long-term outcomes of pairwise interactions between caddisflies at a hydrologically heterogeneous range margin
Limnephilus externus Case Grazing
Predators balance consequences of climate-change-induced habitat shifts for range-shifting and resident species
Effects of Environmental Pond Drying Cues on <i> Asynarchus nigriculus </i> Cannibalism Rates
Animal-Driven Nutrient Supply Declines Relative to Ecosystem Nutrient Demand Along a Pond Hydroperiod Gradient
Testing how density affects caddisfly distribution along a detritus quality gradient
From animals to ecosystem processes: Predicting functional outcomes of climate-driven changes in animal communities through species traits
Biotic interactions at species’ range limits in a changing climate
Biogeochemical characteristics and hydroperiod affect carbon dioxide flux rates from exposed high-elevation pond sediments
Elevation alters outcome of competition between resident and range shifting species
Carbon Dioxide Concentrations and Efflux from Permanent, Semi-Permanent, and Temporary Subalpine Ponds
Determining the Effects of Climate-Induced Range Shifts on Caddisfly Population Dynamics
References (79)
10 in Knowledge Hub, 69 external
