Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications

Body size is perhaps the most fundamental property of an organism and is central to ecology at multiple scales, yet obtaining accurate estimates of ecologically meaningful size metrics, such as body mass, is often impractical. Allometric scaling and mass-to-mass relationships have been used as alter...

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Main Authors: Fabio Leonardo Meza-Joya, Mary Morgan-Richards, Steven A. Trewick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2022-06-01
Series:Journal of Orthoptera Research
Online Access:https://jor.pensoft.net/article/79819/download/pdf/
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author Fabio Leonardo Meza-Joya
Mary Morgan-Richards
Steven A. Trewick
author_facet Fabio Leonardo Meza-Joya
Mary Morgan-Richards
Steven A. Trewick
author_sort Fabio Leonardo Meza-Joya
collection DOAJ
description Body size is perhaps the most fundamental property of an organism and is central to ecology at multiple scales, yet obtaining accurate estimates of ecologically meaningful size metrics, such as body mass, is often impractical. Allometric scaling and mass-to-mass relationships have been used as alternative approaches to model the expected body mass of many species. However, models for predicting body size in key herbivorous insects, such as grasshoppers, exist only at the family level. To address this data gap, we collected empirical body size data (hind femur length and width, pronotum length, live fresh mass, ethanol-preserved mass, and dry mass) from 368 adult grasshoppers of three flightless species at Hamilton Peak, Southern Alps, New Zealand. We examined the relationships among body size components across all species using linear and non-linear regression models. Femur length and preserved mass were robust predictors of both fresh mass and dry mass across all species; however, regressions using preserved mass as a predictor always showed higher predictive power than those using femur length. Based on our results, we developed species-specific statistical linear mixed-effects models to estimate the fresh and dry masses of individual grasshoppers from their preserved mass and femur length. Including sex as an additional co-variate increased model fit in some cases but did not produce better estimates than traditional mass-to-mass and allometric scaling regressions. Overall, our results showed that two easy-to-measure, unambiguous, highly repeatable, and non-destructive size measures (i.e., preserved mass and femur length) can predict, to an informative level of accuracy, fresh and dry body mass across three flightless grasshopper species. Knowledge about the relationships between body dimensions and body mass estimates in these grasshoppers has several important ecological applications, which are discussed.
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spelling doaj.art-7782fbc7a1d24ffc980db542c598cb582022-12-22T02:37:27ZengPensoft PublishersJournal of Orthoptera Research1937-24262022-06-013119110310.3897/jor.31.7981979819Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applicationsFabio Leonardo Meza-Joya0Mary Morgan-Richards1Steven A. Trewick2Massey UniversityMassey UniversityMassey UniversityBody size is perhaps the most fundamental property of an organism and is central to ecology at multiple scales, yet obtaining accurate estimates of ecologically meaningful size metrics, such as body mass, is often impractical. Allometric scaling and mass-to-mass relationships have been used as alternative approaches to model the expected body mass of many species. However, models for predicting body size in key herbivorous insects, such as grasshoppers, exist only at the family level. To address this data gap, we collected empirical body size data (hind femur length and width, pronotum length, live fresh mass, ethanol-preserved mass, and dry mass) from 368 adult grasshoppers of three flightless species at Hamilton Peak, Southern Alps, New Zealand. We examined the relationships among body size components across all species using linear and non-linear regression models. Femur length and preserved mass were robust predictors of both fresh mass and dry mass across all species; however, regressions using preserved mass as a predictor always showed higher predictive power than those using femur length. Based on our results, we developed species-specific statistical linear mixed-effects models to estimate the fresh and dry masses of individual grasshoppers from their preserved mass and femur length. Including sex as an additional co-variate increased model fit in some cases but did not produce better estimates than traditional mass-to-mass and allometric scaling regressions. Overall, our results showed that two easy-to-measure, unambiguous, highly repeatable, and non-destructive size measures (i.e., preserved mass and femur length) can predict, to an informative level of accuracy, fresh and dry body mass across three flightless grasshopper species. Knowledge about the relationships between body dimensions and body mass estimates in these grasshoppers has several important ecological applications, which are discussed.https://jor.pensoft.net/article/79819/download/pdf/
spellingShingle Fabio Leonardo Meza-Joya
Mary Morgan-Richards
Steven A. Trewick
Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications
Journal of Orthoptera Research
title Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications
title_full Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications
title_fullStr Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications
title_full_unstemmed Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications
title_short Relationships among body size components of three flightless New Zealand grasshopper species (Orthoptera, Acrididae) and their ecological applications
title_sort relationships among body size components of three flightless new zealand grasshopper species orthoptera acrididae and their ecological applications
url https://jor.pensoft.net/article/79819/download/pdf/
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AT marymorganrichards relationshipsamongbodysizecomponentsofthreeflightlessnewzealandgrasshopperspeciesorthopteraacrididaeandtheirecologicalapplications
AT stevenatrewick relationshipsamongbodysizecomponentsofthreeflightlessnewzealandgrasshopperspeciesorthopteraacrididaeandtheirecologicalapplications