The adaptive significance of color polymorphism in two species of Diaptomus (Copepoda)1
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Limnology and Oceanography
- Vol. 24 (1) , 15-37
- https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1979.24.1.0015
Abstract
In the Lower Grand Coulee, Washington, Diaptomus nevadensis in Soap Lake contains larger amounts of the carotenoid astaxanthin than in Lake Lenore. During winter, Diaptomus sicilis contains larger amounts of pigment in both lakes, but in summer individuals from Lake Lenore are much reduced in pigment while those from Soap Lake are unchanged. The amount of astaxanthin might be a reflection of the amount of pigment in the copepods’ diet or might reflect the relative importance of selective forces acting for and against pigmentation. Seasonal variations in copepod carotenoid content did not correspond with variations in total lipid content. Algal abundance was measured by chlorophyll a and plant carotenoids correlated with copepod carotenoids only in the case of D. nevadensis in Soap Lake. The percent of D. nevadensis guts containing algae was correlated with their pigment content in both lakes. Visually oriented predators, such as damselfly nymphs from both lakes and salamander larvae from Lake Lenore, selected red copepods, but few predators from Lake Lenore contained D. nevadensis. Since members of this species were rare, the probability of finding a predator that had consumed one was low. When fed identical diets, copepods from Lake Lenore were a fifth to a thirtieth as efficient at assimilating carotenoid as those from Soap Lake. This supports the hypothesis that the pigment differences are the result of natural selection. Selective predation is implicated as the explanation for the small amounts of pigment in Lake Lenore copepods.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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