Natural Prey and Digestion Times of Toxorhynchites rutilus (Diptera: Culicidae) in Southern Florida
- 1 November 2000
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Annals of the Entomological Society of America
- Vol. 93 (6) , 1280-1287
- https://doi.org/10.1603/0013-8746(2000)093[1280:npadto]2.0.co;2
Abstract
Natural prey of Toxorhynchites rutilus (Coquillett) were identified from gut contents of 941 larvae collected from treeholes and tires located in an oak-palm woodland in south Florida. Twenty taxa of aquatic prey were recognized in midgut remains, in addition to eggs of Diptera from three families. Ostracods and chironomids were the most abundant aquatic prey in predators from tires, and rotifers and copepods from treeholes. Mosquito larvae accounted for only 6% of prey items from treeholes and 5% from tires. Remains of terrestrial arthropods of nine insect orders plus mites and spiders were also identified, these prey having been captured from the water surface by T. rutilus larvae. An electivity coefficient, R, was calculated for dipterous prey of each predator instar. Significant heterogeneities among R values in tires were attributable, in part, to high electivity for certain mosquito species, especially Aedes albopictus (Skuse), and for psychodid larvae, and low electivity for larvae of T. rutilus and Orthopodomyia signifera (Coquillett), a predator-resistant mosquito larva. Diets were more similar between predator instars in tires than in treeholes, where invertebrate diversity was higher. An associated laboratory study was conducted to determine how long common prey could be detected in guts after ingestion. When alternative prey were provided immediately after consumption, oligochaetes, copepods, and psychodid larvae and adults were detected in >50% of dissected T. rutilus for 8-18 h after ingestion. By contrast, if T. rutilus fourth instars were starved after ingesting test prey, identifiable remains of psychodid larvae were detectable for >30 d in most predator larvae. Thus, the assessment of T. rutilus diet by identification of midgut remains is highly dependent on the consumption of subsequent prey.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Life Tables ofToxorhynchites rutilus(Diptera: Culicidae) in Nature in Southern FloridaJournal of Medical Entomology, 2000
- Determination of prey antigen half‐life in Polistes metricus using a monoclonal antibody‐based immunodot assayEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 1993
- Search Behavior Associated with Egg Cannibalism in Toxorhynchites amboinensis and Toxorhynchites rutilus rutilus (Diptera: Culicidae)Journal of Medical Entomology, 1993
- Toxorhynchites Rutilus Rutilus (Diptera: Culicidae): Field Studies on Dispersal and Oviposition in the Context of the Biocontrol of Urban Container-Breeding MosquitoesJournal of Medical Entomology, 1983
- Predator-mediated, non-equilibrium coexistence of tree-hole mosquitoes in southeastern North AmericaOecologia, 1983
- The sampling characteristics of electivity indicesOecologia, 1982
- Instar and species‐specific diets in two species of Chaoborus1Limnology and Oceanography, 1975
- The investigation of samples containing many species: II. Sample comparisonBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1971
- Kendall's “Tau” Coefficient as an Index of Similarity in Comparisons of Plant or Animal CommunitiesThe Canadian Entomologist, 1963
- SOME PREDATORS OF AEDES STIMULANS (WALK.) AND AEDES TRICHURUS (DYAR) (DIPTERA: CULICIDAE) IN WOODLAND POOLSCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1961