4.5 Article

The impact of salinity on a saline water insect: Contrasting survival and energy budget

期刊

JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY
卷 131, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2021.104224

关键词

Cellular Energy Allocation; Energy storage; Lestes macrostigma; Niche selection; Phenoloxidase; Stress

资金

  1. French Water Agency 'Rhone-Mediterranean-Corsica'
  2. European Union through FEDER funding
  3. French South Region
  4. Marseille-Fos Euro-Mediterranean Port

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Water salinity is a major factor influencing the distribution of aquatic insects, with high salinity levels potentially causing negative effects on larval growth and survival. Research showed that increasing salinity led to slower growth rate, initially higher and then declining survival rate from larval to metamorphosis stage, and increased energy consumption in the adult stage.
Water salinity is a major driver of aquatic insects' distribution. Saline species are usually generalists with high survival and performance at both low and high salinity levels. Yet, costs of high salinity may be underestimated as these are most often measured in terms of larval life history traits, while effects of larval stressors may only be detectable when looking at physiological traits and traits in the adult stage. Here, we assessed the lethal and sublethal physiological effects of embryonic and larval exposure to a range of salinity levels in the damselfly Lestes macrostigma, both during and after metamorphosis. This species inhabits temporary freshwaters where salinity increases during the drying phase. Salinity had no effect on egg hatching success within the range 2-9.5 g/L sea salt (conductivity range 3.45-14.52 mS/cm). With increasing salinity (up to 16 g/L, 23.35 mS/cm), growth rate decreased and larvae took longer to emerge and did so at a smaller size. Larval survival to metamorphosis increased with salinity up to 8 g/L (12.45 mS/cm) and then declined at 16 g/L. Exposure to salinity in the larval stage had no effect across metamorphosis on both the adult thorax muscle mass and flight performance, and the investment in immune function. Increasing salinity in the larval stage also had no effect on the energy available but increased the energy consumption in the adult stage, resulting in a lower net energy budget. These negative sublethal effects of increasing salinity hence bridged metamorphosis and contrasted with the mortality data, suggesting that the higher mortality at the low salinity levels selected for larvae with the best body condition. Our results highlight the importance of taking into account other life-history and physiological traits, besides mortality, ideally across different life stages, to better understand and predict consequences of increasing salinization on freshwater insects.

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