Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera)

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Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera). / Friberg, Nikolai; Jacobsen, Dean.

In: Freshwater Biology, Vol. 42, No. 4, 01.12.1999, p. 625-635.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Friberg, N & Jacobsen, D 1999, 'Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera)', Freshwater Biology, vol. 42, no. 4, pp. 625-635. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2427.1999.00501.x

APA

Friberg, N., & Jacobsen, D. (1999). Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera). Freshwater Biology, 42(4), 625-635. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2427.1999.00501.x

Vancouver

Friberg N, Jacobsen D. Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera). Freshwater Biology. 1999 Dec 1;42(4):625-635. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2427.1999.00501.x

Author

Friberg, Nikolai ; Jacobsen, Dean. / Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera). In: Freshwater Biology. 1999 ; Vol. 42, No. 4. pp. 625-635.

Bibtex

@article{6ba7c403670941d28879edf9caf9b7e7,
title = "Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera)",
abstract = "1. We investigated the growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum by feeding groups of larvae on a fresh macrophyte, Potamogeton perfoliatus, conditioned sitka spruce needles, Picea sitchensis, conditioned alder leaves, Alnus glutinosa, conditioned ash leaves, Fraxinus excelsior, and a fresh filamentous green alga, Microspora sp. A sixth treatment group of larvae was fasted. 2. The nitrogen content of the food items ranged from 1.4% dry weight (DW) for Picea needles to 4.4% DW for Microspora filaments. Consumption of the various food items by Sericostoma differed significantly, being highest for Picea, and lowest for Potamogeton and Microspora. 3. The instantaneous growth rate ranged from -1.3% DW day-1 in the fasting group to 0.75% DW day-1 in the Alnus group. The growth rate of larvae fed on Alnus, Fraxinus and Microspora was similar, and significantly higher than that of the other three groups. An increase in the size of larval cases followed the same pattern as larval growth, although with less variation between food items. 4. Larvae fed on Microspora exhibited the greatest increase in fat content, while that of the larvae fed on Picea and those in the fasting group decreased. The gross growth efficiency (G/I%) of Sericostoma (larva + case) ranged from 2% when fed on Picea to 34% when fed on Microspora. Consumption was significantly correlated with the nutrient content of food items, whereas G/I% and growth rate were only weakly related to food quality. 5. The growth of Sericostoma varies with diet and the food items sustaining highest growth rate are not necessarily the 'typical' shredder food resources.",
keywords = "Case building, Food quality, Growth efficiency, Nitrogen, Preference",
author = "Nikolai Friberg and Dean Jacobsen",
year = "1999",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1046/j.1365-2427.1999.00501.x",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
pages = "625--635",
journal = "Freshwater Biology",
issn = "0046-5070",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Variation in growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum (Trichoptera)

AU - Friberg, Nikolai

AU - Jacobsen, Dean

PY - 1999/12/1

Y1 - 1999/12/1

N2 - 1. We investigated the growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum by feeding groups of larvae on a fresh macrophyte, Potamogeton perfoliatus, conditioned sitka spruce needles, Picea sitchensis, conditioned alder leaves, Alnus glutinosa, conditioned ash leaves, Fraxinus excelsior, and a fresh filamentous green alga, Microspora sp. A sixth treatment group of larvae was fasted. 2. The nitrogen content of the food items ranged from 1.4% dry weight (DW) for Picea needles to 4.4% DW for Microspora filaments. Consumption of the various food items by Sericostoma differed significantly, being highest for Picea, and lowest for Potamogeton and Microspora. 3. The instantaneous growth rate ranged from -1.3% DW day-1 in the fasting group to 0.75% DW day-1 in the Alnus group. The growth rate of larvae fed on Alnus, Fraxinus and Microspora was similar, and significantly higher than that of the other three groups. An increase in the size of larval cases followed the same pattern as larval growth, although with less variation between food items. 4. Larvae fed on Microspora exhibited the greatest increase in fat content, while that of the larvae fed on Picea and those in the fasting group decreased. The gross growth efficiency (G/I%) of Sericostoma (larva + case) ranged from 2% when fed on Picea to 34% when fed on Microspora. Consumption was significantly correlated with the nutrient content of food items, whereas G/I% and growth rate were only weakly related to food quality. 5. The growth of Sericostoma varies with diet and the food items sustaining highest growth rate are not necessarily the 'typical' shredder food resources.

AB - 1. We investigated the growth of the detritivore-shredder Sericostoma personatum by feeding groups of larvae on a fresh macrophyte, Potamogeton perfoliatus, conditioned sitka spruce needles, Picea sitchensis, conditioned alder leaves, Alnus glutinosa, conditioned ash leaves, Fraxinus excelsior, and a fresh filamentous green alga, Microspora sp. A sixth treatment group of larvae was fasted. 2. The nitrogen content of the food items ranged from 1.4% dry weight (DW) for Picea needles to 4.4% DW for Microspora filaments. Consumption of the various food items by Sericostoma differed significantly, being highest for Picea, and lowest for Potamogeton and Microspora. 3. The instantaneous growth rate ranged from -1.3% DW day-1 in the fasting group to 0.75% DW day-1 in the Alnus group. The growth rate of larvae fed on Alnus, Fraxinus and Microspora was similar, and significantly higher than that of the other three groups. An increase in the size of larval cases followed the same pattern as larval growth, although with less variation between food items. 4. Larvae fed on Microspora exhibited the greatest increase in fat content, while that of the larvae fed on Picea and those in the fasting group decreased. The gross growth efficiency (G/I%) of Sericostoma (larva + case) ranged from 2% when fed on Picea to 34% when fed on Microspora. Consumption was significantly correlated with the nutrient content of food items, whereas G/I% and growth rate were only weakly related to food quality. 5. The growth of Sericostoma varies with diet and the food items sustaining highest growth rate are not necessarily the 'typical' shredder food resources.

KW - Case building

KW - Food quality

KW - Growth efficiency

KW - Nitrogen

KW - Preference

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0033376990&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1046/j.1365-2427.1999.00501.x

DO - 10.1046/j.1365-2427.1999.00501.x

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0033376990

VL - 42

SP - 625

EP - 635

JO - Freshwater Biology

JF - Freshwater Biology

SN - 0046-5070

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 243292653