Arid
DOI10.1007/s10682-013-9644-0
Slow growth improves compensation ability: examining growth rate and starvation endurance in pit-building antlions from semi-arid and hyper-arid regions
Rotkopf, Ron; Alcalay, Yehonatan; Bar-Hanin, Einav; Barkae, Erez David; Ovadia, Ofer
通讯作者Rotkopf, Ron
来源期刊EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY
ISSN0269-7653
EISSN1573-8477
出版年2013
卷号27期号:6页码:1129-1144
英文摘要

Different environments are expected to exert differential selective pressures, often generating distinct sets of traits in organisms inhabiting different geographic regions. Starvation endurance is an important trait for organisms in harsh (i.e., extreme climate and/or biotically poor) and unpredictable environments. This is especially true for sit-and-wait predators, such as antlions, which experience stronger fluctuations in prey arrivals than do actively searching predators. We conducted an experimental comparison of starvation endurance in pit-building antlions, originating from semi-arid and hyper-arid environments. We hypothesized that individuals from the climatically harsher and biotically poor environment (i.e., hyper-arid) should be better adapted to endure long starvation periods. Additionally, we posited that faster-growing individuals are expected to be more sensitive to starvation because of their need to sustain higher metabolic rates. We found that antlions originating from the semi-arid region maintained higher activity levels, which led to slightly higher mass loss rates during starvation, but enabled faster recovery when food supply was renewed. Conversely, antlions originating from the hyper-arid region had lower activity levels, consistent with their lower rate of mass loss during starvation, but this came at the expense of decreased response to prey and lower growth rate when food became available again. Each strategy holds its advantages for coping with long starvation periods, and we cannot say decisively which strategy is better. Results from both regions were consistent with the predictions of the growth compensation phenomenon: antlions that were fed less frequently pre-starvation grew at faster rates when food supply was renewed. Our study demonstrates that individuals originating from different environments adopt different strategies in order to endure starvation, exemplifying antlions’ ability to compensate for mass lost during starvation.


英文关键词Clinal variation Growth compensation Life-history Local adaptation Myrmeleontidae Trade-off
类型Article
语种英语
国家Israel
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000326897500006
WOS关键词LIFE-HISTORY VARIATION ; BODY-SIZE ; DROSOPHILA-MELANOGASTER ; LATITUDINAL VARIATION ; STRESS RESISTANCE ; ENERGY-METABOLISM ; PREY CAPTURE ; COHO SALMON ; POPULATIONS ; DESERT
WOS类目Ecology ; Evolutionary Biology ; Genetics & Heredity
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Evolutionary Biology ; Genetics & Heredity
来源机构Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/177090
作者单位Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Dept Life Sci, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Rotkopf, Ron,Alcalay, Yehonatan,Bar-Hanin, Einav,et al. Slow growth improves compensation ability: examining growth rate and starvation endurance in pit-building antlions from semi-arid and hyper-arid regions[J]. Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,2013,27(6):1129-1144.
APA Rotkopf, Ron,Alcalay, Yehonatan,Bar-Hanin, Einav,Barkae, Erez David,&Ovadia, Ofer.(2013).Slow growth improves compensation ability: examining growth rate and starvation endurance in pit-building antlions from semi-arid and hyper-arid regions.EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY,27(6),1129-1144.
MLA Rotkopf, Ron,et al."Slow growth improves compensation ability: examining growth rate and starvation endurance in pit-building antlions from semi-arid and hyper-arid regions".EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY 27.6(2013):1129-1144.
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