ASYMMETRIC INTERACTIONS BETWEEN SPECIES OF SEAWEED FLY

Authors
Citation
S. Hodge et W. Arthur, ASYMMETRIC INTERACTIONS BETWEEN SPECIES OF SEAWEED FLY, Journal of Animal Ecology, 66(5), 1997, pp. 743-754
Citations number
63
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218790
Volume
66
Issue
5
Year of publication
1997
Pages
743 - 754
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8790(1997)66:5<743:AIBSOS>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
1. This paper describes the colonization patterns of, and interactions between, three common species of British seaweed fly: the coelopids, Coelopa frigida and C. pilipes; and the sphaerocerid, Thoracochaeta zo sterae. 2. All three species exhibited similar temporal patterns in ab undance on wrack beds in the field: adult flies were more abundant in the first 4 days after wrack deposition and then again towards the end of the wrack bed cycle, coinciding with the emergence of the next gen eration. 3. Two forms of resource were presented to the flies, minced and chopped seaweed (Fucus serratus), under controlled environmental c onditions. The species interacted so as to produce a dominance series, with C. frigida being the strongest species and T. zosterae the weake st. All pairwise interactions were extremely asymmetric, adding suppor t to the growing awareness that this phenomenon is common in interacti ons between insects. 4. On chopped seaweed only, C. pilipes facilitate d C. frigida, more than doubling the latter's emergent population size . This facilitation, in conjunction with the inhibition of C. pilipes by C. frigida, produced a contramensal (+, -) interaction. Suggestions are made as to how the facilitative effect may have been produced, bu t the exact mechanism is not yet understood.