Abstract

Non-consumptive predator effects experienced in early life stages of prey may result in life-history costs in later life stages. Such effects can, for example, alter the growth rate during the juvenile stage, which may carry over to size at maturity. However, we have limited knowledge of the carry-over effects starting from the egg stage through the larval stage to the adult stage. Here, we present results from a laboratory experiment in which we exposed a damselfly, Ischnura elegans, to chemical cues originating from a fish predator, perch. We used a 2 × 2-full-factorial design in which the damselflies were exposed to predator cues during either the immobile egg or the mobile larval stage. The presence of predator cues, i.e., non-consumptive predator effects, during the egg stage caused decreased survival, but only until 2 wk after larval hatching. Predator cues during the larval stage caused decreased survival until emergence and an increase in development time until emergence. However, mass at emergence was not affected by predator cues. When fish cues were present in the egg or larval stage, there was a lower growth rate until final-instar larvae than in larvae that did not receive fish cues. Our results add to the growing number of studies showing that predation-risk cues in the egg stage can carry over to the adult stage, which ultimately could have consequences for adult life-history traits, such as survival and fecundity.

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