Abstract

BackgroundPredation is ubiquitous in nature. One form of predation is cannibalism, which is affected by many factors such as size structure and resource density. However, cannibalism may also be influenced by abiotic factors such as seasonal time constraints. Since time constraints are greater at high latitudes, cannibalism could be stronger at such latitudes, but we know next to nothing about latitudinal variation in cannibalism. In this study, we examined cannibalism and activity in larvae of the damselfly Lestes sponsa along a latitudinal gradient across Europe. We did this by raising larvae from the egg stage at different temperatures and photoperiods corresponding to different latitudes.ResultsWe found that the more seasonally time-constrained populations in northern latitudes and individuals subjected to greater seasonal time constraints exhibited a higher level of cannibalism. We also found that activity was higher at north latitude conditions, and thus correlated with cannibalism, suggesting that this behaviour mediates higher levels of cannibalism in time-constrained animals.ConclusionsOur results go counter to the classical latitude-predation pattern which predicts higher predation at lower latitudes, since we found that predation was stronger at higher latitudes. The differences in cannibalism might have implications for population dynamics along the latitudinal gradients, but further experiments are needed to explore this.

Highlights

  • The cannibalism rate at the northern latitude was higher compared to the south (GLM: χ2 2 = 125.31, P < 0.001)

  • The GLM showed that northern latitude differed significantly from the central (P = 0.002) and southern (P < 0.001) ones, but that the central and southern latitudes did not differ from one another (P = 0.604)

  • We found support for our predictions that cannibalism should increase with stronger time constraints, because cannibalism was higher at northern latitude conditions

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Summary

Introduction

We examined cannibalism and activity in larvae of the damselfly Lestes sponsa along a latitudinal gradient across Europe. Cannibalism may be density dependent (such that a higher risk is achieved with more potential cannibals), or density independent where cannibalism varies with other environmental variables besides density of conspecifics [5, 6]. In this is study we focus on the density independent cannibalism driven by seasonal time constraints along a latitudinal gradient.

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