Abstract

Reproductive strategies of principal rain-pool midges, Chironomus imicola and Chironomus pulcher are investigated in field and laboratory. The two species are able to lay at least one full clutch without access to food in the adult stage. Since females are also capable of flying for extended periods without feeding, they carry out both adult functions (i.e. dispersal and reproduction), without taking energy from the terrestrial environment. We argue that independance of the terrestrial environment is adaptively appropriate to animals able to exploit a larval habitat rich in food and low in interspecific competition. However, there are costs to this strategy because freshwaters, and notably rain-pools, are unpredictable habitats inclined to dry up periodically. These species must, therefore, constantly colonise new pools by laying eggs. We show that adult females can resort to feeding and that if they do so the energy acquired goes to the production of further eggs with a consequent increase in colonizing ability. As a test of this hypothesis that there is a relationship between duration of habitat and the number of eggs layed, we have examined a third rain-pool dwelling chironomid, Polypedilum vanderplanki. This species is unique among insects in that larvae are able to survive desiccation of their tissues. For them there is thus not the same incentive to leave before the home pool dries. So, P. vanderplanki does not need to be a colonizer. Observations confirm this view since P. vanderplanki adult females, even when fed, lay no more than one clutch of eggs. Consequently, reproduction and feeding in the adult female are related to the way in which duration of the habitat is perceived. We suggest that, measured against P. vanderplanki, Chironomus species provide a useful model of the ideal freshwater animal.

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