Journal article
Aquatic versus terrestrial insects: Real or presumed differences in population dynamics?
J Lancaster, BJ Downes
Insects | MDPI | Published : 2018
Abstract
The study of insect populations is dominated by research on terrestrial insects. Are aquatic insect populations different or are they just presumed to be different? We explore the evidence across several topics. (1) Populations of terrestrial herbivorous insects are constrained most often by enemies, whereas aquatic herbivorous insects are constrained more by food supplies, a real difference related to the different plants that dominate in each ecosystem. (2) Population outbreaks are presumed not to occur in aquatic insects. We report three examples of cyclical patterns; there may be more. (3) Aquatic insects, like terrestrial insects, show strong oviposition site selection even though they ..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by Discovery Projects from the Australian Research Council, DP120103145 and DP160102262, awarded to J.L. and B.J.D.