Literature DB >> 2355210

Rates of energy processing by blowflies: the uses for a joule vary with food quality and quantity.

F R Hainsworth1, G Fisher, E Precup.   

Abstract

Data on the variation of crop volumes with time for blowflies (Phormia regina Meigen) fed various volumes and concentrations of fructose or sucrose (from Gelperin, 1966, and Edgecomb et al. 1987) were used to characterize energy processing rates to test the assumption of food energy addivity of optimal foraging theories. Six regression models (linear, square root, cube root, hyperbolic, inverse cube root and exponential) were compared for data from Edgecomb et al. (1987) with measurements of crop volumes from 10 min to 5 h after blowflies were fed 9.7 or 14.5 microliters of 0.25 moll-1 sucrose. Only the hyperbolic regression could be discriminated as statistically different, and the linear model was selected as most parsimonious for examining rates of energy processing. About the same volume bypassed the crop for flies fed 9.7 or 14.5 microliters. Volume rates of crop emptying (from Gelperin, 1966) did not change at intermediate concentrations but decreased from lowest and to highest concentrations. Energy processing patterns indicate that long-term storage rates increase with meal size and at intermediate concentrations and decrease (3.0 moll-1 fructose) or remain constant (2.0 moll-1 sucrose) at high concentrations, so the uses for a unit of energy are not additive across concentrations and meal sizes. Animals that process energy in this way should attempt to maximize meal size and include high-energy foods in their diet out of proportion to the amount of energy gained for the time spent foraging.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2355210     DOI: 10.1242/jeb.150.1.257

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Biol        ISSN: 0022-0949            Impact factor:   3.312


  2 in total

1.  Blow Flies Were One of the Possible Candidates for Transmission of Highly Pathogenic H5N1 Avian Influenza Virus during the 2004 Outbreaks in Japan.

Authors:  Kyoko Sawabe; Keita Hoshino; Haruhiko Isawa; Toshinori Sasaki; Kyeong Soon Kim; Toshihiko Hayashi; Yoshio Tsuda; Hiromu Kurahashi; Mutsuo Kobayashi
Journal:  Influenza Res Treat       Date:  2010-12-28

2.  Experimental evaluation of Musca domestica (Diptera: Muscidae) as a vector of Newcastle disease virus.

Authors:  D Wes Watson; Elina L Niño; Kateryn Rochon; Steve Denning; Lynda Smith; James S Guy
Journal:  J Med Entomol       Date:  2007-07       Impact factor: 2.278

  2 in total

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