Journal
OECOLOGIA
Volume 122, Issue 3, Pages 318-326Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s004420050037
Keywords
body size; size regulation; copepod crustaceans; growth and development; molt increment
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Body size affects survival probabilities, reproductive output and individual fitness in many organisms. In freshwater zooplankton. traits ranging from demographic rates to community composition depend on body size, and predation is most often identified as the selection pressure determining body size. We examined the extent to which stage-specific growth trajectories and body sizes of copepod crustaceans are constrained, independent of selection. We used exuviae shed at each molt to quantify the relationship between size at moiling and growth during the subsequent instar for two common, herbivorous calanoid copepods, Boeckella triarticulata and Diaptaomus leptopus. Individuals of both species were raised under diets of different food quality or quantity, and at different temperatures. Size at molting varied little amen individuals of both species, as a consequence of a persistent negative relationship between size at molting and subsequent (absolute) growth increment. Individuals that were small when they molted grew more during the subsequent instar than individuals that were large. This relationship was statistically significant for nearly all instars of both species raised in different food or temperature conditions, and not affected by food quality, food quantity or temperature. Our results indicate that body size is constrained or regulated over much of the copepod life cycle, independent of the effects of environmental conditions (food. temperature, predation).
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