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Chaoborus crystallinuspredation onDaphnia pulex: can induced morphological changes balance effects of body size on vulnerability?

✍ Scribed by Ralph Tollrian


Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
564 KB
Volume
101
Category
Article
ISSN
0029-8549

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✦ Synopsis


Juvenile Daphnia pulex form neckteeth in reponse to chemicals released by predatory Chaoborus crystallinus larvae. Formation of neckteeth is strongest in the second instar followed by the third instar, whereas only small neckteeth are found in the first and fourth instar of experimental clones. Predation experiments showed that body-size-dependent vulnerability of animals without neckteeth to fourth instar C. crystallinus larvae matched the pattern of neckteeth formation over the four juvenile instars. Predation experiments on D. pulex of the same clone with neckteeth showed that vulnerability to C. crystallinus predation is reduced, and that the induced protection is correlated with the degree of neckteeth formation. The pattern of neckteeth formation in successive instars is probably adaptive, and it can be concluded that neckteeth are formed to different degrees in successive instars as an evolutionary compromise to balance prediation risk and protective costs.