首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Insect Conservation >Bridges as optical barriers and population disruptors for the mayfly Palingenia longicauda: an overlooked threat to freshwater biodiversity?
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Bridges as optical barriers and population disruptors for the mayfly Palingenia longicauda: an overlooked threat to freshwater biodiversity?

机译:桥梁作为the的光屏障和种群破坏者:对淡水生物多样性的被忽视的威胁?

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Freshwater biodiversity is declining faster than marine or terrestrial diversity, yet its drivers are much less known. Although dams were shown to negatively affect river habitats, fragmentation by bridges has received less attention and is not as well understood. We tested whether and how bridges present barriers to aquatic insects by studying mass swarmings of Palingenia longicauda mayflies on river Tisza (NE-Hungary). Behavioural observations showed that upon approaching the bridge, upstream-flying mayflies typically turned back and 86% of them never crossed the bridge. Lack of physical contact showed that the bridge was an optical, rather than a mechanical barrier for the polarotactic mayflies. Imaging polarimetry showed that the bridge disrupted the horizontally polarizing channel guiding the flight of mayflies above the river. Energy loss, demonstrated by calorimetry, and time constraints forced females to lay eggs only downstream from the bridge. Counts of larval skins shed by swarming individuals showed nearly 2 to 1 female per male downstream from the bridge, while sex ratio above the bridge was slightly male-biased. We suggest that the surplus of parthenogenetic females, that produce only female larvae, downstream from the bridge may have led to the observed sex-ratio bias since the construction of the bridge (1942). Our results demonstrate that bridges can be optical barriers for aquatic insects and can cause population-level impacts, such as biased sex ratios, in natural populations.Sex ratio biases due to bridges may decrease effective population size and genetic variability, which may have contributed to the recent extinction of this species from most of Europe.
机译:淡水生物多样性的下降速度快于海洋或陆地生物多样性,但其驱动力却鲜为人知。尽管显示出水坝会对河流生境产生不利影响,但是桥梁的破碎引起的关注较少,人们对此也知之甚少。我们通过研究蒂萨河(匈牙利新罕布什尔州)上的长柄帕林肯亚长尾may蜂群,测试了桥梁是否以及如何对水生昆虫造成障碍。行为观察表明,在接近桥梁时,上游飞行的苍蝇通常会向后转,其中有86%的从未飞过桥梁。缺乏物理接触表明,该桥对立群可能是光学的,而不是机械的障碍。成像极化仪显示,该桥破坏了水平极化通道,引导了河上的may蝇的飞行。通过量热法证明的能量损失和时间限制迫使雌性仅在桥的下游产卵。蜂拥而至的人的幼虫皮肤计数表明,桥下游的每个雄性中有接近2比1的雌性,而桥上方的性别比则略有男性偏见。我们认为,自桥梁建造以来(1942年),过剩的孤雌生殖雌性仅在桥梁下游产生雌性幼虫,可能导致观察到的性别比偏差。我们的研究结果表明,桥梁可能是水生昆虫的光学屏障,并可能在自然种群中引起种群水平的影响,例如性别比偏见。桥梁造成的性别比偏差可能会降低有效种群数量和遗传变异性,这可能有助于该物种最近在欧洲大部分地区灭绝。

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