4.3 Article

Cracks or holes in the stems of oviposition plants provide the only exit for hatched larvae of diving beetles of the genera Dytiscus and Cybister

Journal

ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA
Volume 140, Issue 2, Pages 127-133

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1570-7458.2011.01140.x

Keywords

Cybister chinensis; Cybister lewisianus; Cybister brevis; Dytiscus sharpi; larval survival; escape rate; hatchability; spawning behavior; Coleoptera; Dytiscidae

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Diving beetles such as Dytiscus and Cybister species (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae) usually oviposit inside an aquatic plant stem beneath the surface of the water. The hatched larvae need to escape from the stem to intake oxygen from the air. To determine where larvae of these diving beetles hatch in the plant stem, the hatchability and escape rates in larvae of Dytiscus sharpi Wehncke, Cybister chinensis Motshulsky, Cybister lewisianus Sharp, and Cybister brevis Aube were investigated under laboratory conditions. Hatchability of D. sharpi in the stem of Sagittaria trifolia L. (Alismataceae) was extremely low (8.2%). However, it was high (>90%) when late-stage eggs (2-3 days before hatching) were isolated from the stem and kept in water. On the other hand, the hatchability of Cybister spp. was high (88-95%) in S. trifolia. Usually, Cybister spp. females bite a hole in the plant stem on oviposition. When the oviposition pore in the stem was plugged with glass wool, no larvae could escape from the stem, indicating that the oviposition pore was the only exit for hatched larvae of Cybister spp. In contrast, females of D. sharpi oviposited directly by making a crack in the stem of Oenanthe javanica (Blume) DC. (Apiaceae) without biting. Eggs grew to a length and diameter equal to the stem crack size 2-3 days before hatching. Dytiscus sharpi eggs isolated from O. javanica were artificially inserted into plant stems of O. javanica or S. trifolia (so-called inserted egg model), and the hatchability and larval escape rates were determined. Larval escape strongly depended on the stem crack width of both O. javanica and S. trifolia, suggesting that the stem crack was an exit for hatched larvae of D. sharpi.

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