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Document Description
Title
The
ingestion
and
digestion
of
algal
and
other
foods
by
larval
black
flies
(Diptera
:
simuliidae)
of
Newfoundland
Author
Thompson
,
Bruce
Hunter
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1989.
Biology
Date
1989
Pagination
xvi, 281 leaves : ill.
Subject
Simuliidae--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Larvae;
Simuliidae--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Feeding
and
feeds
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biology
Discipline
Biology
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
194-210
Abstract
Feeding
selectivity
in
larval
simuliids
of
several
Newfoundland
species
was
studied
by
comparing
relative
abundances
of
algal
taxa
in the
guts
of
field-collected
larvae
with those in the
associated
seston
and
periphyton.
With the
exception
of the
first
instar
of
Prosimulium
mixtum
Syme
&
Davies
,
larvae
of
P.
mixtum
,
Stegopterna
mutata
Malloch
,
Cnephia
ornithophilia
Davies
et
al.
,
Simulium
vittatum
Zetterstedt
,
Simulium
venustum
Say
and
S.
verecundum
Stone
&
Jamnback
utilized
the
seston
almost
exclusively
for
provision
of
food.
No
evidence
was
found
to
suggest
that
algal
particles
were
selected
on a
qualitative
basis
,
nor
did
the
data
indicate
striking
dissimilarities
among
species
of
similar
physiological
age
, as to
selectivity
based
on
particle
size.
However
,
differing
selectivities
on the
basis
of
particle
size
were
observed
among
conspecific
larvae
of
different
physiological
age.
C.
ornithophilia
appeared
to be
exceptional
,
showing
selectivity
for
relatively
large
diatom
particles
over
much
smaller
bacterial
particles
, as
compared
to
other
species
of
larvae
tested.
Selectivity
for
particles
within
a
certain
intermediate
size
range
(5-15
µm)
was
comparatively
high
for this
species.
--
Measurements
of
gut
passage
rates
in the
eurythermal
S.
vittatum
indicated
that
feeding
rates
increased
generally
with
increased
temperature
and
particulate
matter
(PM)
concentration.
Feeding
efficiency
,
however
,
decreased
with
increased
PM
concentration
and with
increased
current
velocity.
The
"completeness"
of
digestion
,
studied
by
using
diatoms
as
indicators
,
increased
generally
with
increasing
temperature
in
S.
vittatum
and the
warm
stenothermal
S.
verecundum.
In
P.
mixtum
, a
cold
stenothermal
species
, the
reverse
temperature
relationship
was
shown.
Algae
of
different
taxa
varied
markedly
in
susceptibility
to
digestion.
--
Larvae
of
different
species
were
capable
of
utilizing
a
wide
variety
of
particulate
foods
,
including
algae
,
bacteria
and
detritus.
In
feeding
trials
,
overall
larval
growth
was
highest
when
fed
on
diatoms
,
lowest
when
fed
on
leaf
litter
and
intermediate
when
reared
on
green
algae
or
bacteria.
The
nutritional
importance
of
various
classes
of
suspended
particulate
matter
is
a
function
of its
availability
in the
seston
, its
susceptibility
to
ingestion
, its
inherent
digestibility
and its
nutrient
content.
--
Key
words:
Simuliids;
filter-feeding;
selectivity;
grazing;
algae;
bacteria;
digestion;
productivity;
nutrition;
feeding
rates.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76038585
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(29.18
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Thompson_BruceHunter.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
247047.cpd