Publication | Closed Access
Competition among Larval Dragonflies: A Field Enclosure Experiment
94
Citations
20
References
1985
Year
BiologyBays Mountain LakeField Enclosure ExperimentTetragoneuria CynosuraNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyEntomologyPredator-prey InteractionIntraguild PredationInterspecific Behavioral InteractionAquatic OrganismInsect Social BehaviorInterference Competition
Tetragoneuria cynosura and Celithemis elisa dominate the larval dragonfly assemblage of Bays Mountain Lake, Tennessee, USA, where they coexist in the extensive submersed macrophyte and allochthonous detritus habitats despite relatively high overlap in both seasonal occurrence and diet. Field enclosure experiments, designed to determine the intensity of intraspecific and interspecific competition at approximately natural densities, were conducted during September 1981 and April 1982. Survival rate for both species was dependent on intraspecific density in September, and that for C. elisa was also affected by the presence of T. cynosura. These effects are attributed to interference (encounter) competition rather than to exploitation (consumption) competition. The mechanism of competition seems to be predation by larger larvae on smaller larvae. No evidence of either exploitation or interference competition was found in the April experiment.
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