Preference by the Nymphs of Americabaetis alphus Lugo-Ortiz & McCafferty, 1996 (Baetidae: Ephemeroptera) for Feeding substrate and Food Size Under Laboratory Conditions
Bárbara Oleinski, Thais Carneiro, Laís Olivera das Neves, Mikael Luiz Pereira Morales, Edélti Faria Albertoni

TL;DR
This study examines the feeding preferences of Americabaetis alphus mayfly nymphs on different substrates and food sizes in a lab setting.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the feeding substrate and food size preferences of Americabaetis alphus nymphs under controlled conditions.
Findings
Nymphs showed higher bacterial and chlorophyll-a intake on stainless steel substrates.
There was a greater reduction in fine particulate organic matter after feeding.
Stainless steel substrates had a higher frequency of diatoms compared to acrylic substrates.
Abstract
Feeding by mayflies is influenced by resource availability, and their feeding preferences can vary acrossdevelopment stages. Studies assessing food preferences can therefore provide insights into the functional role of a species. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feeding preferences of Americabaetis alphus nymphs on periphyton growing two different substrates and two sizes of particulate organic matter. Experimental units were composed of acrylic and stainless steel substrates; the control contained no nymphs. The substrate preference was determined by the presence or absence of nymphs on the substrates. Bacterial density and chlorophyll-a concentration were measured to evaluate food intake, and the frequency of microbial taxa adhering to the substrates was calculated. Salix humboldtiana leaves were processed into two categories, fine particulate organic matter (FPOM) and coarse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFreshwater macroinvertebrate diversity and ecology · Diatoms and Algae Research · Mollusks and Parasites Studies
