Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies

1. Inasmuch as virtually all studies on mortality and reproduction in insects are conducted under conditions in which food availability is constant, little is known about the demographic response of insects to variable food environments. For example, it is not known if and to what extent the life expectancy of insects subjected to shortages of high-quality food will increase and/or whether this increase is associated with major decreases in lifetime reproduction. 2. Therefore cohorts of 100 individual female medflies were subjected to different sets of conditions of protein availability (interspersed with sugar-only diets) including ad libitum sugar-only (no protein), ad libitum protein and full (protein) diet either every 2nd, 4th, 6th, 11th or 21st day, as well as two lag-treatments (1 day full diet followed by 30 days sugar-only, followed by one of two cyclical treatments). 3. Both life expectancy and lifetime reproduction were strongly affected by specific treatments. Specifically (i) mortality was inversely related to frequency of protein availability whereas lifetime reproduction was directly related; (ii) distinct cycles in reproduction began to appear when food pulse cycles were as short as every 4 days. However, egg-laying peaks and troughs were particularly pronounced in the 10- and 20-day food pulse cycles; (iii) the peak and trough levels were inversely related to cycle length; and (iv) the within-cycle height was independent of cycle length, occurring 4 days after protein food was made available to the cohort whether the cycle length was 5, 10 or 20 days. 4. The results shed new light on the within- and between-cycle and lifetime dynamics of reproduction when insects are subjected to variable food environments and indicate that medfly females track food level very closely.

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Main Authors: Carey, James R. Doctor 20199, Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67, Harshman, L. autor/a, Liu, X. autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Moscas de la fruta, Nutrición animal, Ciclos vitales (Biología), Ceratitis capitata, Reproducción de insectos,
Online Access:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1365-2435.2002.00633.x/pdf
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:25898
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Moscas de la fruta
Nutrición animal
Ciclos vitales (Biología)
Ceratitis capitata
Reproducción de insectos
Moscas de la fruta
Nutrición animal
Ciclos vitales (Biología)
Ceratitis capitata
Reproducción de insectos
spellingShingle Moscas de la fruta
Nutrición animal
Ciclos vitales (Biología)
Ceratitis capitata
Reproducción de insectos
Moscas de la fruta
Nutrición animal
Ciclos vitales (Biología)
Ceratitis capitata
Reproducción de insectos
Carey, James R. Doctor 20199
Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67
Harshman, L. autor/a
Liu, X. autor/a
Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies
description 1. Inasmuch as virtually all studies on mortality and reproduction in insects are conducted under conditions in which food availability is constant, little is known about the demographic response of insects to variable food environments. For example, it is not known if and to what extent the life expectancy of insects subjected to shortages of high-quality food will increase and/or whether this increase is associated with major decreases in lifetime reproduction. 2. Therefore cohorts of 100 individual female medflies were subjected to different sets of conditions of protein availability (interspersed with sugar-only diets) including ad libitum sugar-only (no protein), ad libitum protein and full (protein) diet either every 2nd, 4th, 6th, 11th or 21st day, as well as two lag-treatments (1 day full diet followed by 30 days sugar-only, followed by one of two cyclical treatments). 3. Both life expectancy and lifetime reproduction were strongly affected by specific treatments. Specifically (i) mortality was inversely related to frequency of protein availability whereas lifetime reproduction was directly related; (ii) distinct cycles in reproduction began to appear when food pulse cycles were as short as every 4 days. However, egg-laying peaks and troughs were particularly pronounced in the 10- and 20-day food pulse cycles; (iii) the peak and trough levels were inversely related to cycle length; and (iv) the within-cycle height was independent of cycle length, occurring 4 days after protein food was made available to the cohort whether the cycle length was 5, 10 or 20 days. 4. The results shed new light on the within- and between-cycle and lifetime dynamics of reproduction when insects are subjected to variable food environments and indicate that medfly females track food level very closely.
format Texto
topic_facet Moscas de la fruta
Nutrición animal
Ciclos vitales (Biología)
Ceratitis capitata
Reproducción de insectos
author Carey, James R. Doctor 20199
Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67
Harshman, L. autor/a
Liu, X. autor/a
author_facet Carey, James R. Doctor 20199
Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67
Harshman, L. autor/a
Liu, X. autor/a
author_sort Carey, James R. Doctor 20199
title Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies
title_short Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies
title_full Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies
title_fullStr Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies
title_full_unstemmed Food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies
title_sort food pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in mediterranean fruit flies
url http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1365-2435.2002.00633.x/pdf
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AT liedofernandezpablodoctorautora67 foodpulsesincreaselongevityandinducecyclicaleggproductioninmediterraneanfruitflies
AT harshmanlautora foodpulsesincreaselongevityandinducecyclicaleggproductioninmediterraneanfruitflies
AT liuxautora foodpulsesincreaselongevityandinducecyclicaleggproductioninmediterraneanfruitflies
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:258982024-08-26T11:26:55ZFood pulses increase longevity and induce cyclical egg production in Mediterranean fruit flies Carey, James R. Doctor 20199 Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67 Harshman, L. autor/a Liu, X. autor/a texteng1. Inasmuch as virtually all studies on mortality and reproduction in insects are conducted under conditions in which food availability is constant, little is known about the demographic response of insects to variable food environments. For example, it is not known if and to what extent the life expectancy of insects subjected to shortages of high-quality food will increase and/or whether this increase is associated with major decreases in lifetime reproduction. 2. Therefore cohorts of 100 individual female medflies were subjected to different sets of conditions of protein availability (interspersed with sugar-only diets) including ad libitum sugar-only (no protein), ad libitum protein and full (protein) diet either every 2nd, 4th, 6th, 11th or 21st day, as well as two lag-treatments (1 day full diet followed by 30 days sugar-only, followed by one of two cyclical treatments). 3. Both life expectancy and lifetime reproduction were strongly affected by specific treatments. Specifically (i) mortality was inversely related to frequency of protein availability whereas lifetime reproduction was directly related; (ii) distinct cycles in reproduction began to appear when food pulse cycles were as short as every 4 days. However, egg-laying peaks and troughs were particularly pronounced in the 10- and 20-day food pulse cycles; (iii) the peak and trough levels were inversely related to cycle length; and (iv) the within-cycle height was independent of cycle length, occurring 4 days after protein food was made available to the cohort whether the cycle length was 5, 10 or 20 days. 4. The results shed new light on the within- and between-cycle and lifetime dynamics of reproduction when insects are subjected to variable food environments and indicate that medfly females track food level very closely.1. Inasmuch as virtually all studies on mortality and reproduction in insects are conducted under conditions in which food availability is constant, little is known about the demographic response of insects to variable food environments. For example, it is not known if and to what extent the life expectancy of insects subjected to shortages of high-quality food will increase and/or whether this increase is associated with major decreases in lifetime reproduction. 2. Therefore cohorts of 100 individual female medflies were subjected to different sets of conditions of protein availability (interspersed with sugar-only diets) including ad libitum sugar-only (no protein), ad libitum protein and full (protein) diet either every 2nd, 4th, 6th, 11th or 21st day, as well as two lag-treatments (1 day full diet followed by 30 days sugar-only, followed by one of two cyclical treatments). 3. Both life expectancy and lifetime reproduction were strongly affected by specific treatments. Specifically (i) mortality was inversely related to frequency of protein availability whereas lifetime reproduction was directly related; (ii) distinct cycles in reproduction began to appear when food pulse cycles were as short as every 4 days. However, egg-laying peaks and troughs were particularly pronounced in the 10- and 20-day food pulse cycles; (iii) the peak and trough levels were inversely related to cycle length; and (iv) the within-cycle height was independent of cycle length, occurring 4 days after protein food was made available to the cohort whether the cycle length was 5, 10 or 20 days. 4. The results shed new light on the within- and between-cycle and lifetime dynamics of reproduction when insects are subjected to variable food environments and indicate that medfly females track food level very closely.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorMoscas de la frutaNutrición animalCiclos vitales (Biología)Ceratitis capitataReproducción de insectosDisponible en líneaFunctional Ecologyhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1365-2435.2002.00633.x/pdfDisponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso