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Intense inhabitation and relaxed host-leaf preference of aquatic chironomid leaf-miners in headwater streams in Asian lucidophyllous forests
Authors:Makoto Kato
Institution:1. Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japankato@zoo.zool.kyoto-u.ac.jp
Abstract:Submerged leaf litter in headwater streams covered by Asian lucidophyllous (glossy broad-leaved evergreen) forests was found to be frequently processed by leaf-mining larvae of a chironomid, Stenochironomus okialbus. The larva gnaws plant tissue of the mine wall while swimming and undulating its body in the water-filled mine. To detect the level of the inhabitation and host-preference of the aquatic leaf-miner, extensive samplings of mined leaves were made in various headwater streams covered by lucidophyllous forests in the Japanese Island Arc. The chironomid showed significant preference for leaf texture (evergreen to deciduous leaves) and for specific taxonomic groups of the host plants (Fagaceae and Lauraceae), whereas diverse taxa of leaves were utilised. The relaxed host-leaf preference unique among herbivorous insects is suggested to be caused by the larval water-circulating behaviour in their porous mines and by leaching and microbial decomposition of plants’ secondary metabolites in submerged leaves.
Keywords:host-leaf preference  aquatic leaf-miner  lucidophyllous forest  detritus passway  chironomid midge
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