Skip to main content
Log in

Contrasting mortality in young freshwater leeches and triclads

  • Original Paper
  • Published:
Oecologia Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

A guild of leeches and triclads coexist and are the most numerous invertebrate predators on the stony shores of productive British lakes. Populations of all species are food-limited. Mortality of recruited young is considerably higher in leech than in triclad populations, and this paper investigates reasons for this. In particular, the feeding success of young leeches and triclads in relation to prey species, prey size, prey condition (alive or crushed), spatial heterogeneity (with or without the presence of stones or gravel), and the presence or absence of other young or adults predators (leeches or triclads) of the same or different species are investigated in the laboratory. Feeding success by young leeches and triclads on crushed prey without the presence of stones was high, but declined dramatically in leeches but not triclads when stones were present. Young leeches and triclads were inept at capturing live prey, of a small or large size, with the exception of soft-bodied prey such as oligochaetes. Feeding success by young predators on live prey was not increased by the presence of other young predators of the same or different species. With only a few exceptions, the presence of adult leeches, and to a much lesser extent adult triclads, increased the feeding success, growth and survival of young leeches and triclads. It is concluded that the high mortality of young leeches, compared to triclads, in field populations is due to their inability to locate damaged food in an environment with spatial heterogeneity due to a poorly developed chemosensory system. High and low levels of juvenile morality are accompanied by high and low reproductive rates in leech and triclad populations, respectively. It is unusual for a food limited population to have a high level of recruitment, but it is speculated that the characteristically high reproductive output in parasitic leeches, from which predaceous leeches are derived or have affinities, has been retained to counterbalance high juvenile mortality rates.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Institutional subscriptions

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Blinn DW, Davies RW (1989) The evolutionary importance of mechanoreception in three erpobdeliid leech species. Oecologia 79:6–9

    Google Scholar 

  • Blinn D, Wagner W, Grin JN (1986) Surface sensilla on the predaceous leech Erpobdella montezuma: possible importance in feeding. Trans Am Microsc Soc 105:21–30

    Google Scholar 

  • Blinn D, Pinney C, Wagner WT (1988) Intraspecific discrimination of amphipod prey by a freshwater leech through mechanoreception. Can J Zool 66:427–430

    Google Scholar 

  • Calow P (1980) Feeding in freshwater triclads — adaptational aspeets. In: Smith DC, Tiffon Y (eds) Nutrition in the lower metazoa. Pergamon, Oxford, pp 15–31

    Google Scholar 

  • Calow P, Davidson A, Woollhead AS (1981) Life-cycles and feeding strategies in freshwater triclads; a synthesis. J Zool Lond 193:215–237

    Google Scholar 

  • Calow P, Woollhead AS (1977) Locomotory strategies in freshwater triclads and their effects on the energetics of degrowth. Oecologia 27:353–362

    Google Scholar 

  • Davies RW, Linton LR, Parsons W, Edgington ES (1982a) Chemosensory detection of prey by Nephelopsis obscura (Hirudiniodea: Erpobdellidae). Hydrobiologia 97:157–161

    Google Scholar 

  • Davies RW, Wrona FJ, Linton L (1982b) Changes in numerical dominance and its effects on prey utilization and inter-specific competition between Erpobdella punctata and Nephlops obscura (Hirudinoidea): an assessment. Oikos 39:92–99

    Google Scholar 

  • Friesen WO (1981) Physiology of water motion detection in the medicinal leech. J Exp Biol 92:255–275

    Google Scholar 

  • Friesen WO, Dedwylder RD (1978) Detection of low amplitude water movements: a new sensory modality in the medicinal leech. Neuroscience Oxford 4:380

    Google Scholar 

  • Greene KL (1974) Experiments and observations on the feeding behaviour of the freshwater leech Erpopbdella octoculata (L.) (Hirudinea: Erpobdellidae). Arch Hydrobiol 74:87–99

    Google Scholar 

  • Hyman LH (1951) The invertebrates: Platyhelminthes and Rhynchocoela, the acoelomate Bilateria, vol 2. McGraw Hill, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin AJ, Seaby RMH, Young JO (1994a) Food limitation in lake-dwelling leeches: field experiments. J Anim Ecol 63:93–100

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin AJ, Seaby RMH, Young JO (1994b) Does body size in the leeches Glossiphonia complanata and Helobdella stagnalis contribute to coexistence? Hydrobiologia 273:67–75

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin AJ, Seaby RMH, Young JO (1994c) The consequence of a food refuge collapse on a guild of lake-dwelling triclads and leeches. Hydrobiologia 277:187–195

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1958) The quantitative ecology of lake-dwelling triclads in northern Britain. Oikos 9:94–138

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1960) A quantitative study of the population biology of Polycelis tenuis (Ijima) (Turbellaria, Tricladida). Oikos 11:125–141

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1961) A quantitative study of the population biology of Dugesia lugubris (O. Schmidt) (Turbellaria, Tricladida). Oikos 12:111–125

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1964) Evidence for intra-specific competition in field populations of triclads. Jub Symp Suppl J Anim Ecol 33:187–201

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1966) The distribution and abundance of lakedwelling triclads—towards a hypothesis. Adv Ecol Res 3:1–71

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1975) Food overlap of lake-dwelling triclads in the field. J Anim Ecol 44:245–250

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB (1983) The population biology of Turbellaria with special reference to the freshwater triclads of the British Isles. Adv Ecol Res 13:235–326

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB, Davies RW (1970) Food niche and co-existence in lake-dwelling triclads. J Anim Ecol 39:599–617

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB, Young JO (1963) The food of four species of lake-dwelling triclads. J Anim Ecol 32:175–191

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB, Young JO (1965) Food supply as a factor regulating population size in freshwater triclads. Mitt Int Ver Limnol 13:3–20

    Google Scholar 

  • Reynoldson TB, Young JO, Taylor MC (1965) The effect of temperature on the life-cycle of four species of lake-dwelling triclads. J Anim Ecol 34:23–43

    Google Scholar 

  • SAS (1985) SAS users guide: statistics version 5.8. SAS Institute, Cary

    Google Scholar 

  • Sawyer RT (1986) Leech biology and behaviour, vols 1 and 2. Clarendon, Oxford

    Google Scholar 

  • Silva PK de (1976) The importance of mucus of Dendrocoelum lacteum (Muller) (Turbellaria, Tricladida) in community existence. Arch Hydrobiol 78:363–374

    Google Scholar 

  • Spelling SM, Young JO (1987) Predation on lake-dwelling leeches: an evaluation by field experiment. J Anim Ecol 56:131–146

    Google Scholar 

  • Wrona FJ, Davies RW, Linton L, Wilkialis J (1981) Competition and coexistence between Glossiphonia complanata and Helobdella stagnalis (Glossiphoniidae: Hirudinoidea). Oecologica 48:133–137

    Google Scholar 

  • Taylor MC, Reynoldson TB (1962) The population biology of lake-dwelling Polycelis species with special reference to P. nigra (Mull.) (Turbellaria, Tricladida). J Anim Ecol 31:273–291

    Google Scholar 

  • Young JO (1981) A comparative study of the food niches of lake-dwelling triclads and leeches. Dev Hydrobiol 6:91–102

    Google Scholar 

  • Young JO, Ironmonger JW (1981) A quantitative study of the comparative distribution of non-parasitic leeches and triclads in the stony littoral of British lakes. Int Rev Ges Hydrobiol 66:847–862

    Google Scholar 

  • Young JO, Ironmonger JW (1982) The influence of temperature on the life cycle and occurrence of three species of lake-dwelling leeches. J Zool Lond 196:519–543

    Google Scholar 

  • Young JO, Reynoldson TB (1966) A quantitative study of the population biology of Dendrocoelum lacteum (Muller) (Turbellaria, Tricladida). Oikos 15:237–264

    Google Scholar 

  • Young JO, Spelling SM (1989) Food utilisation and niche overlap in three species of lake-dwelling leeches (Hirudinea). J Zool Lond 219:231–243

    Google Scholar 

  • Zar JH (1984) Biostatistical analysis. Prentice-Hall, New Jersey

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Young, J.O., Seaby, R.M.H. & Martin, A.J. Contrasting mortality in young freshwater leeches and triclads. Oecologia 101, 317–323 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00328817

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00328817

Key words

Navigation