Herbivory on calcicolous lichens: different food preferences and growth rates in two co-existing land snails
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 98 (3-4) , 313-319
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00324219
Abstract
A total of 32 calcicolous lichen species, one alga and one bryophyte were recorded on a limestone wall in the grassland Great Alvar on the Baltic island of Öland, Sweden. Fourteen (41%) of these 34 species and free-living cyanobacteria showed herbivore damage, most probably due to grazing by the land snails Chondrina clienta and Balea perversa which inhabited the limestone wall. Three laboratory experiments were conducted to examine the food preferences of individuals of C. clienta and B. perversa collected at this site and to evaluate any association between their preference and the net food quality of the lichens to the snails. Chondrina clienta and B. perversa exhibited food preferences, which differed significantly between species. Within species, variation in food choice was similar among individuals. This indicates that snail populations may be composed of polyphagous individuals with similar food preferences. Different lichen species were of different net food quality to the snails as indicated by growth rate differences. In both snail species the most preferred lichen species of the choice experiment caused the largest weight increase in juveniles, viz. Caloplaca flavovirescens for C. clienta and Aspicilia calcarea for B. perversa. This suggest that the snail species studied differ in their abilities to deal with secondary compounds and physical characteristics of certain lichens or that they can utilize the energy and nutrients of these lichens to a different extent. It is suggested that differential food preferences might reduce the intensity of interspecific competition for resources (lichens) between C. clienta and B. perversa.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- High performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC), an improved technique for screening lichen substancesThe Lichenologist, 1993
- Differential herbivore damage to calcicolous lichens by snailsThe Lichenologist, 1993
- The effect of lichen diet on growth rate in the rock-dwelling land snails Chondrina clients(Westerlund) and Balea perversa (Linnaeus)Journal of Molluscan Studies, 1992
- Intra- and Interspecific Influences on Age at First Reproduction and Fecundity in the Land Snail Balea perversaOikos, 1990
- Experimental Evidence for Intra- and Interspecific Competition in Two Species of Rock-Dwelling Land SnailsJournal of Animal Ecology, 1990
- Microgeographical variation in shell size of the land snail Chondrina clientaBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1988
- On the Evolution of Host Specificity in Phytophagous ArthropodsEcology, 1988
- The Rock-Scraping Radula, a Striking Case of Convergence (Mollusca)Netherlands Journal of Zoology, 1981
- Strategies in Herbivory by Mammals: The Role of Plant Secondary CompoundsThe American Naturalist, 1974
- Damage to Lichens by GastropodsThe Lichenologist, 1967