Abstract

The influence of food concentration and population density on the feeding behavior of Anopheles stephensi (Diptera, Culicidae) larvae has been shown experimentally. Lack of food resulted in larvae switching from sweeping the surface film to scraping the substrate off the bottom. The effect of the larval population density was more complex and depended on the food concentration. As a result, the ratio between the larvae keeping to the surface and to the bottom of the vessel was determined by interactions which led to their redistribution between the two trophic niches: the surface film and the bottom substrate. The traits observed ensure plasticity in the use of trophic resources within a water body.

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