黄粪蝇变态的大小依赖能量学

Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
C. Reim, C. Kaufmann, W. Blanckenhorn
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引用次数: 8

摘要

相互竞争的假说:(1)体型越大,能量利用效率越高(相对效率假说)。(2)体型大需要更多的能量来维持,在食物有限的情况下(绝对能量需求假说)是一个劣势。生物:黄粪蝇,粪蝇科(双翅目:粪蝇科),在实验室人工选择大小体型24代,以增加可用的表型体型。方法:分别在有限和无限食物(粪)条件下饲养幼虫,测定不同个体蛹期开始和结束时蛹的能量含量。结论:在蛹期,脂质和糖原降低,糖含量增加。在不限量食物的情况下,单位体重的净能量损失更高。与预期相反,雄性(较大的性别)比雌性损失的能量少。大选择系的蛹在变态过程中表现出最高的绝对能量损失和质量比能量损失,这表明了与体型选择相关的生理反应,因为在有限的粪便中,表型体型在不同的系之间没有差异。我们得出的结论是,在蛹期,体型较大的个体因绝对能量需求增加而产生的能量成本超过了代谢效率提高所带来的收益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Size-dependent energetics of metamorphosis in the yellow dung fly, Scathophaga stercoraria
Competing hypotheses: (1) Large body size confers more efficient energy use (relative efficiency hypothesis). (2) Large body size requires more energy to be sustained, a disadvantage when food is limited (absolute energy demand hypothesis). Organism: Yellow dung flies, Scathophaga stercoraria (Diptera: Scathophagidae), artificially selected for large and small body size in the laboratory for 24 generations to augment the available phenotypic body sizes. Methods: Larvae were reared under limited and unlimited food (dung) conditions, and the energy content of pupae was measured at the beginning and the end of the pupal stage in different, size-matched individuals. Conclusions: Over the pupal period, lipids and glycogen decreased whereas sugar content increased. Net energy loss per unit body mass was higher at unlimited food. Contrary to expectation, males (the larger sex) lost less energy than females. Large selection line pupae showed the highest absolute and mass-specific energy loss during metamorphosis, indicating a correlated physiological response to body size selection because phenotypic body sizes do not differ between the lines at limited dung. We conclude that energetic costs due to greater absolute energy demand of larger individuals during the pupal phase outweigh the benefits due to greater metabolic efficiency.
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Ecology Research
Evolutionary Ecology Research 生物-进化生物学
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Ecology Research publishes original research contributions focusing on the overlap between ecology and evolution. Papers may treat any taxon or be general. They may be empirical, theoretical or a combination of the two. EER prefers conceptual contributions that take intellectual risks or that test ideas.
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