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  • University of Chicago Press
  • 1980-1984  (3)
  • 1950-1954
  • 1940-1944
  • 1
    Publikationsdatum: 2020-06-19
    Beschreibung: Over 1200 squids were captured by night lighting, trawling, or seining in the northern Gulf of Mexico for laboratory maintenance. Two types of recirculating sea water systems were designed and evaluated: a 2 m circular tank (1500 liter capacity) and a 10 m long raceway (10,000 liters). Mean laboratory survival was: Loligo plei (12 to 252 mm mantle length, ML) 11 days, maximum 84 days; Loligo pealei (109 to 285 mm ML) 28 days, maximum 71 days; Lolliguncula brevis (27 to 99 mm ML) 19 days, maximum 125 days. Smaller squids showed significantly poorer survival than larger ones. All squids fed well on a variety of live estuarine fishes and shrimps. Growth rates depended upon stage of maturity. The highest rates were Loligo plei 59 mm/month (23.8 g/mo), Loligo pealei 77 mm/mo (67.3 g/mo), and Lolliguncula brevis 31 mm/mo (17.2 g/mo). General aspects of behavior and body patterning were species-specific and were useful indices of the squids' condition. Key factors for laboratory survival were (1) prevention of skin damage, (2) tank systems with sufficiently large horizontal dimensions, (3) high quality water, (4) ample food supply, (5) no crowding, (6) maintaining squids of similar size to reduce aggression and cannibalism, and (7) segregating sexes to reduce aggression associated with courtship, mating, and egg laying.
    Materialart: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
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    University of Chicago Press
    In:  The American Naturalist, 122 (5). pp. 661-696.
    Publikationsdatum: 2018-11-06
    Beschreibung: In a strictly defined sample of competition studies using controlled field experiments, covering 215 species and 527 experiments, competition was found in most of the studies, in somewhat more than half of the species, and in about two-fifths of the experiments. In most of these experiments interspecific competition was not distinguished from intraspecific competition. In the few studies in which the two were separated, interspecific competition was the stronger form in about onesixth of all experiments done. When competition was demonstrated, intraspecific competition was as strong or stronger than interspecific in three-quarters of the experiments. Some evidence from this literature survey suggests that negative results may be underrepresented, so that the absolute values of these figures may be too high. Since this bias should apply also to studies of all taxa, habitats, or other interactions it should not greatly affect estimates of the relative prevalence of competition. Since these estimates come from field experiments open to other influences such as predators, grazers, weather, disturbances, etc., they should provide a fair approximation of the relative prevalence of interspecific and intraspecific competition in natural ecological communities. The prevalence of competition in these studies varied. Marine organisms showed consistently higher frequencies of competition than terrestrial ones as did large-sized organisms as compared to smaller ones. Plants, herbivores, and carnivores showed similar frequencies of competition in all habitats compared. The incidence of competition varied considerably from year to year and place to place. In some categories, evidence concerning competition is sparse. More studies are needed of all freshwater species, marine vertebrates, parasites, effects on resource partitioning, and particularly the relative strengths of interspecific versus intraspecific competition. When both members of a pair were studied and some competition found, only one member was affected in well over half the experiments. Such strong asymmetrical competition is not always consistent in direction; reversals in the rank order of competitive superiority have been demonstrated by field experiments and direct observations. Some positive interactions were found. These may have been a consequence of actual positive influences or of negative ones acting indirectly through other species. The latter may also apply to some of the negative interactions interpreted as competition in these studies. If only the input and output of an experiment are known, it is difficult to decide what mechanism produced the observed effect. While many of the experiments probably have been correctly interpreted, the present survey illustrates how difficult it is to produce a clear and unambiguous demonstration of interspecific competition.
    Materialart: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
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    Unbekannt
    University of Chicago Press
    In:  The American Naturalist, 117 (5). pp. 754-773.
    Publikationsdatum: 2017-04-20
    Beschreibung: The reproductive ecology of three sympatric hermit crab species from the Bay of Panama is examined. All three species reveal patterns of size and reproduction mediated by their supply of shells. Shells are demonstrated to be in limited supply. Crabs with shells large enough to allow growth, put effort into growth at the expense of reducing reproductive expenditures, while crabs in shells too small to permit growth allocate more time and effort into immediate reproductive gains. This resource regulated trade-off between growth and reproduction gives these tropical crabs plasticity in important life-history traits. Crabs with a relatively poor supply of shells reproduce at smaller sizes, reproduce more frequently, have larger clutches, and are unable to reach the larger sizes of crabs with a less limiting supply of shells. This flexibility in life-history traits allows these crabs to tailor their reproductive schedules to resource supplies controlled by gastropod mortality, as well as the presence of competitors and predators.
    Materialart: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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