Journal article

Environmental constraints on oviposition limit egg supply of a stream insect at multiple scales

J Lancaster, BJ Downes, A Arnold

Oecologia | Published : 2010

Abstract

Species with complex life cycles pose challenges for understanding what processes regulate population densities, especially if some life stages disperse. Most studies of such animals that are thought to be recruitment limited focus on the idea that juvenile mortality limits the density of recruits (and hence population density), fewer consider the possibility that egg supply may be important. For species that oviposit on specific substrata, environmental constraints on oviposition sites may limit egg supply. Female mayflies in the genus Baetis lay egg masses on the underside of stream rocks that emerge above the water's surface. We tested the hypothesis that egg mass densities are constraine..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Natural Environment Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This project was supported by a grant awarded to J.L. and B.J.D. by the Natural Environment Research Council, UK (NE/E004946/1). We are grateful to Beckie Langton, Lisa Belyea and Nigel Crook for their sterling assistance in the field. Thanks to Jim Sutherland and various landowners for site access. Thanks to Chandra Jayasuriya (University of Melbourne, Department of Resource Management and Geography) for producing ESM, Fig. S1. The research complied with current laws in the UK.