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Life cycles and food habits of mayflies and stoneflies from temporary streams in western Oregon

SUMMARY 1. Field data and results from laboratory rearing are combined to describe life cycles and food habits of the mayflies Paraleptophlebia gregalis and Ameletus n. sp., and the stoneflies Soyedina interrupts, Ostrocerca foersteri, Sweltsa fidelis and Calliperla luctuosa. 2. P. gregalis, A. n. s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Freshwater biology 1995-08, Vol.34 (1), p.47-60
Main Authors: DIETERICH, MARTIN, ANDERSON, N. H.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:SUMMARY 1. Field data and results from laboratory rearing are combined to describe life cycles and food habits of the mayflies Paraleptophlebia gregalis and Ameletus n. sp., and the stoneflies Soyedina interrupts, Ostrocerca foersteri, Sweltsa fidelis and Calliperla luctuosa. 2. P. gregalis, A. n. sp., S. interrupts and O. foersteri have univoltine life cycles which are characterized by a high degree of plasticity. S. fidelis and C. luctuosa have semivoltine life cycles which are more tightly synchronized. 3. Laboratory feeding trials and field observations characterize P. gregalis as a collector, A. n. sp. as a scraper, O. foersteri and S. interrupta as shredders and C. luctuosa as a predator mainly of midge larvae. Late‐instar larvae of S. fidelis are believed to be scavengers. 4. Laboratory rearing yielded a negative correlation between growth rates (Y) and larval size in autumn (X) for S. interrupta. This indicates compensatory growth by small larvae in order to achieve synchronized emergence. The correlation can be described by the equation: Y = 0.0053–0.0036X (R2= 0.82; P < 0.01; n = 22) 5. The field and laboratory data indicate that photoperiod mainly determines the rate of development and size of emerging subimagos in P. gregalis.
ISSN:0046-5070
1365-2427
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2427.1995.tb00422.x