Predation effects on the evolution of life-history traits in a clonal oligochaete
Authored by Volker Grimm, K Johst, A Kaliszewicz, J Uchmanski
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1086/432037
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Although size at maturity and size and number of offspring are
life-history traits widely studied in sexual and parthenogenetic
reproduction, there is no such research on animals reproducing asexually
without the involvement of gametes. Here we present an individual-based
model in combination with experiments to study the clonal growth of
Stylaria lacustris, an oligochaete reproducing through fission. We
studied the effect of individual size at fission and fission ratio on
clone fitness. Our results show that in benign environments without
predators, fitness is higher when small worms produce small offspring.
Then we included size-specific sublethal predation and found that the
fitness of the clone is maximized when parental worms start fission at a
large size and produce large descendants intercalated in the middle of
the parental worm's body. These results agree with empirical findings.
Furthermore, the results of our own laboratory experiment revealed that
when S. lacustris is exposed to chemical alarm signals from injured
conspecifics, it alters its life history in the same direction as
predicted by the model. Our findings suggest that the effect of
size-specific sublethal predation is similar to the effect of
size-specific lethal predation because both modes of predation result in
size-dependent prey mortality.
Tags
Strategies
Populations
Asexual reproduction
Daphnia
Echinodermata
Stylaria-lacustris
Naididae oligochaeta
Delayed
maturity
Holothuria-atra
Food niches