Diversity (Jan 2023)

Cannibalism as Competition Strategy in Larvae of the Acorn Weevil <i>Curculio glandium</i> (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)

  • Michał Reut,
  • Raul Bonal,
  • Mariusz Chrabąszcz,
  • Hanna Moniuszko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/d15020145
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 145

Abstract

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Curculio glandium is one of the pre-dispersal seed predators occurring in Central Europe. It is associated with Quercus robur, the acorns of which are shelter and food sources for developing larvae. Females of the species, to our knowledge, are lacking in marking pheromones or do not use them; therefore, in nature, multiple infestations (over 10 eggs or larvae) of the same host fruit can be found. Such density can provoke very strong competition, which was verified in this study. The survival rate and body mass of 695 second-instar larvae, competing in various test groups (one, three, five, eight and ten larvae) offered one acorn, were measured and video recordings made in order to describe their behavior and determine differences between groups. Experimental observations indicated that when the density of larvae in an acorn increased, the survival rate and body mass significantly decreased—being the lowest in test groups consisting of eight and ten individuals. In the latter groups, also the acorn embryo was completely consumed. Video footage, along with the presence of dead, nibbled larvae and living ones covered with scars resembling mouthparts, is evidence for aggression and cannibalism in the second and the third larval instars—behavior scarce in weevils and in phytophagous insects in general. Results confirm the assumption that in heavily infested oak fruits, competition between individuals is so strong that it involves cannibalism, which at the same time provides the strongest larvae with additional nutrients.

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