
doi: 10.1007/bf00767330
Two bdelloid species,Macrotrachela quadricornifera (aquatic species) andPhilodina vorax (terrestrial moss species), with similar survival but different age-specific fecundity schedules, were analyzed daily to determine growth rates and the volume invested in reproduction. The two species had similar growth patterns and started reproduction while still growing. In both, the size at maturity was independent of age.M. quadricornifera resumed growth after reaching a size plateau when reproduction was over, whileP. vorax continued to reproduce until death. Although the net reproductive rate ofP. vorax was consistently lower than that ofM. quadricornifera, the same percent of adult volume was invested in reproduction over its life time because its eggs were relatively bigger. The difference in reproductive rates is probably related to different partitioning of equal amounts of relative biomass: more small eggs for the ‘aquatic’ rotifer vs. fewer big eggs for the ‘terrestrial’ rotifer. Egg size might be related to the selective pressures of the environments.
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