| Literature DB >> 26153104 |
Jessica L Hoskins1, Charlene Janion-Scheepers1, Steven L Chown1, Grant A Duffy1.
Abstract
Although significant progress has been made using insect taxa as model organisms, non-tracheated terrestrial arthropods, such as Collembola, are underrepresented as model species. This underrepresentation reflects the difficulty in maintaining populations of specialist Collembola species in the laboratory. Until now, no species from the family Neanuridae have been successfully reared. Here we use controlled growth experiments to provide explicit evidence that the species Neanura muscorum can be raised under laboratory conditions when its diet is supplemented with slime mould. Significant gains in growth were observed in Collembola given slime mould rather than a standard diet of algae-covered bark. These benefits are further highlighted by the reproductive success of the experimental group and persistence of laboratory breeding stocks of this species and others in the family. The necessity for slime mould in the diet is attributed to the 'suctorial' mouthpart morphology characteristic of the Neanuridae. Maintaining laboratory populations of neanurid Collembola species will facilitate their use as model organisms, paving the way for studies that will broaden the current understanding of the environmental physiology of arthropods.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26153104 PMCID: PMC4495557 DOI: 10.1038/srep11957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of the experimental design used in this study.
Figure 2Photographs representing various Neanura muscorum growth-stages.
Neanura muscorum hatchling (a <1 day old), juvenile N. muscorum before first moult (b <5 days old), and adult N. muscorum laying eggs (c).
Figure 3Body length change over time for two generations (F1, F2) of Neanura muscorum.
Red points represent the experimental group provided with slime mould diet, blue points represent the control group on algae-covered plane tree bark. Fitted models shown with 95% confidence intervals (F1: experimental, y = 1.4205 + 6.1211 x − 1.5328 x2, weighted-R2 = 0.6906; control, y = 0.7486 + 0.9638 x + 0.1662 x2, wR2 = 0.6315. F2: experimental, y = 0.9771 + 3.8062 x + 1.0992 x2, wR2 = 0.6976; control, y = 0.7181 + 0.4565 x + 0.3624 x2, wR2 = 0.7575. Shaded area represents respective F1 or F2 sub-group age range at first egg laying event.
Species of Neanuridae (Collembola) that have been successfully reared on a diet of slime mould and algae-covered bark using the methods recommended in this study.
| Subfamily | Tribe | Genus | Species | Generation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neanurinae | Neanurini | F4 | ||
| Neanurinae | Paleonurini | sp. | F3 | |
| Neanurinae | Paleonurini | Unknown | sp. 1 | F2 |
| Neanurinae | Anuridini | c.f. | F2 | |
| Pseudachorutinae | Pseudochorutini | ? | sp. | F2 |
| Neanurinae | Lobellini | Unknown | sp. 2 | F2 |
| Neanurinae | Lobellini | Unknown | sp. 3 | F2 |
Latest generations as of February 2015. All lines are ongoing. See Supplementary Table 1 online for sample collection data.