Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies

An investigation was undertaken to establish if Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus preferred a diet of unconditioned, artificially or naturally conditioned alder leaves (Alnus glutinosa). Standardised, 24 hour ex situ feeding assays were undertaken with both species to determine their food prefere...

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Main Author: M. C. Bloor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2011-01-01
Series:International Journal of Zoology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/294394
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spelling doaj-97e01a190b1c49d697094dabb0a28f3d2020-11-24T23:26:23ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Zoology1687-84771687-84852011-01-01201110.1155/2011/294394294394Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological StudiesM. C. Bloor0School of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Building, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth, PO1 3QL, UKAn investigation was undertaken to establish if Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus preferred a diet of unconditioned, artificially or naturally conditioned alder leaves (Alnus glutinosa). Standardised, 24 hour ex situ feeding assays were undertaken with both species to determine their food preference. The results showed that A. aquaticus ate more leaf material compared to G. pulex (Z 23.909, P 0.001) when exposed to all three test variables. Also, both G. pulex and A. aquaticus demonstrated a preference for naturally conditioned leaves compared to the other two variables, with unconditioned leaves proving the least popular food option for both macroinvertebrates (Z 18.803, 𝑃<0.001). However, both species ate varying amounts of all the leaf treatments (Z 136.399, 𝑃<0.001). Subsequently, the author outlined a feeding methodology for natural alder leaf conditioning that could be used during a laboratory breeding programme.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/294394
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. C. Bloor
spellingShingle M. C. Bloor
Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies
International Journal of Zoology
author_facet M. C. Bloor
author_sort M. C. Bloor
title Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies
title_short Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies
title_full Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies
title_fullStr Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies
title_full_unstemmed Dietary Preference of Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus during a Laboratory Breeding Programme for Ecotoxicological Studies
title_sort dietary preference of gammarus pulex and asellus aquaticus during a laboratory breeding programme for ecotoxicological studies
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Zoology
issn 1687-8477
1687-8485
publishDate 2011-01-01
description An investigation was undertaken to establish if Gammarus pulex and Asellus aquaticus preferred a diet of unconditioned, artificially or naturally conditioned alder leaves (Alnus glutinosa). Standardised, 24 hour ex situ feeding assays were undertaken with both species to determine their food preference. The results showed that A. aquaticus ate more leaf material compared to G. pulex (Z 23.909, P 0.001) when exposed to all three test variables. Also, both G. pulex and A. aquaticus demonstrated a preference for naturally conditioned leaves compared to the other two variables, with unconditioned leaves proving the least popular food option for both macroinvertebrates (Z 18.803, 𝑃<0.001). However, both species ate varying amounts of all the leaf treatments (Z 136.399, 𝑃<0.001). Subsequently, the author outlined a feeding methodology for natural alder leaf conditioning that could be used during a laboratory breeding programme.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/294394
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