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1.
Abstract. 1. The diversity of mating systems in bark beetles (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) is poorly understood. Ips latidens (LeConte) is a small-bodied species of a harem polygynous genus whose mating system in nature had not been established previously. This study examines the breeding biology of I. latidens breeding in recently dead ponderosa pine ( Pinus ponderosa ) in California. It was expected that both the heterogeneous habitat quality inherent in dead trees and small body size would favour polygyny.
2. Contrary to expectations, I. latidens was found to be monogamous on the basis of excavations of 131 galleries conducted throughout the oviposition period at two wind-felled trees and at four sites composed of freshly-cut logs. Males left the galleries much sooner than females (50% gone by 24 and 36 days, respectively).
3. Individual females made up to four egg gallery arms extending from the male nuptial chamber, with the number of arms and the length of individual arms increasing with the age of the gallery. The relationship between total gallery length and gallery age was consistent among the trees and log sites, and did not depend on the presence of the male.
4. Ips latidens bred in a wide range of tree diameters (10–24 cm), and occurred in both pure aggregations and in aggregations with two other bark beetle species, Dendroctonus brevicomis and I. paraconfusus . The presence of the other species did not appear to influence negatively the density of I. latidens .
5. Monogamy in I. latidens may be due to lower male mortality during dispersal associated with a greater range of suitable breeding habitat than occurs for other Ips species, resulting in an even sex ratio at breeding sites.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract 1 Egg loads from field collected pollen beetles (Meligethes aeneus Fab., Coleoptera: Nitidulidae) were determined by dissecting beetles caught at the beginning and end of the putative daily oviposition period. Field collected beetles were offered Brassica napus (L.) plants in cages for 8 (morning and early afternoon), 16 (overnight), and 24 h to ascertain the number of eggs laid during these time periods. 2 Most eggs were laid in the morning and early afternoon. The proportion of gravid females was higher at the beginning of the oviposition period than at the end. Most females in the morning carried two eggs, whereas one egg was more common in the afternoon. 3 We hypothesized that the number of eggs laid during the oviposition period would be equivalent to the difference between egg loads at the beginning and end of oviposition. This was not the case; differences in egg loads were significantly lower than number of eggs laid. However, the number of eggs laid was equivalent to the egg load at the beginning of the oviposition period, suggesting that eggs available in the morning are laid during the following day. 4 Population estimates of daily oviposition rates, approximately 0.7 eggs per beetle and day, were close to estimates from laboratory studies when the proportion of gravid females was taken into consideration.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract. 1. The influence of experience on egg maturation, parasitism rate, and behaviour during host searching was investigated for Lariophagus distinguendus (Först.) (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) parasitizing larvae of the granary weevil Sitophilus granarius (L.) in grains of wheat Triticum aestivum L.
2. Dissection of female parasitoids and parasitism bioassays at high host density revealed that experience with hosts (e.g. by oviposition or by host feeding) is not required either for triggering oogenesis or for oviposition.
3. In parasitism experiments at low host density, when single host-infested grains were offered within a bulk of healthy grains, host finding and parasitism rate were increased by experience.
4. Behavioural observations revealed that searching time required for finding an infested grain was shorter for experienced parasitoids than for naive parasitoids, because travel time from grain to grain is shorter for experienced parasitoids, and because experienced parasitoids spend less time than naive parasitoids on non-infested grains.
5. In conclusion, experience due to host exposure increases parasitism and thereby the fitness of the parasitoids. It is discussed that this increase is more likely due to learning than to different egg load dynamics of experienced parasitoids.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract. 1. Previous work has shown that ovipositing females of Callosobruchus maculatus (F.) avoid seeds already bearing eggs, and thereby reduce competition among their larval progeny within seeds.
2. This study demonstrates that females also detect small differences in egg density, and prefer to oviposit on seeds with a lower-than-average number of eggs. A nearly uniform dispersion of eggs is thus maintained even after all seeds bear several eggs.
3. In addition, variation in egg load influences oviposition rate. Transfer of females from seeds with few eggs to seeds with many eggs inhibits oviposition; the reverse transfer stimulates it.
4. The upper surface of the egg chorion or egg 'cover' remains intact on the seed surface after the larva has entered the seed and continues to deter egg-laying for at least as long as the period required for larval development. 14-day-old egg covers provide as much deterrence as freshly laid eggs.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract .1. The nature of intraspecific competition was investigated in the southern pine beetle, Dendroctonus frontalis , a highly destructive pest of pine forests in the southern U.S.A. Data were analysed from an observational study of naturally-attacked trees, and from field experiments where attack density was manipulated by adding different numbers of beetles to caged trees.
2. The effect of attack density on gallery construction, oviposition, brood survival, and the overall rate of increase was examined, and a flexible model of intraspecific competition used to classify the type of competition (contest or scramble) at different points in the life cycle.
3. The results of these analyses suggest that contest competition occurs during gallery construction and oviposition, in accord with previous work on D. frontalis . Strong scramble competition occurs later on in development, however, and the overall competitive process is better characterized as scramble competition, similar to other bark beetles. Trees with attack densities sufficiently high to produce significant competition are common in the field.  相似文献   

6.
1. The pine engraver bark beetle Ips pini (Say) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae), aggregates primarily on dead or dying pine trees. In this study pine engravers were laboratory-reared on logs at a range of low densities to determine whether there was a fecundity advantage of breeding aggregations.
2. Mean reproductive success for both males and females declined exponentially with increasing density.
3. Female pine engravers had shorter egg galleries at higher densities, suggesting that they left high-density breeding sites earlier. This would reduce the number of eggs that failed to survive due to larval competition.
4. Some pine engravers colonized the logs voluntarily during the experiment. These volunteers settled independently of the original density.
5. The fungus Ophiostoma sp. was present on the logs and may be competing with the pine engravers for limited bark area.
6. Aggregation resulted in a considerable cost to pine engraver reproductive success even at low densities. Thus, it remains perplexing why pine engravers aggregate actively in nature.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract 1. There was a positive correlation between oviposition and feeding preferences and offspring performance in the spittlebug Aphrophora pectoralis Matsumura (Homoptera: Cercopoidea, Aphrophoridae) on four species of willow Salix sp. (Salicaceae) growing near Sapporo, Japan. Spittlebugs preferred rapidly growing shoots where performance was highest.
2. When the effects of shoot length were removed, egg densities on willow species were associated with offspring performance on three of four species. Egg densities and survival rates were low on Salix integra and Salix miyabeana . Survival rates were high on Salix sachalinensis , which had high egg densities, and Salix hultenii , which had low egg densities.
3. Aphrophora pectoralis formed mating aggregations almost exclusively on S. sachalinensis but then dispersed to other willow species to oviposit.
4. Nymphs dispersed from the oviposition site to feed on nearby shoots within the same plant but they did not disperse to other willow plants. Nymphs had the same preference for rapidly growing shoots as ovipositing females, so they were able to refine the maternal choice by moving to larger shoots near the shoot on which they had eclosed.
5. The spittlebugs were highly aggregated at all life stages so that even at high densities only a small proportion of the most vigorously growing shoots was utilised.  相似文献   

8.
Richard Karban 《Oecologia》1983,59(2-3):226-231
Cherry trees (Prunus serotina) responded to oviposition by periodical cicadas (Magicicada spp.) by depositing gum at the egg nest. The proportion of cicada eggs that hatched successfully was significantly reduced at egg nests with visible gum compared to non-gummed egg nests. The number of egg nests with gum increased in proportion to the total number of egg nests on a tree. The probability of an egg nest having visible gum increased as the total number of egg nests increased. Mortality at hatching due to gum deposition increased as a direct density-dependent function of the number of cicada eggs laid in the tree. Although statistically significant, this relationship was weak and appeared to hold only at densities above 100 egg nests per tree. Gum deposition is discussed as an induced plant response to cicada attack. A cherry may reduce the number of cicada nymphs that will parasitize it up to the next oviposition period (17 or 13 years later) by reducing cicada hatching through gum deposition at the site of oviposition.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract .1. The pine sawfly, Neodiprion autumnalis , infests ponderosa pine, Pinus ponderosa , growing at low densities near the bottom of an altitudinal gradient in Arizona, U.S.A. The relative importance of host-plant quality vs. natural-enemy effects in determining the spatial distribution of this sawfly was examined over a 3-year period.
2. Field and laboratory bioassays were conducted on all life stages of N. autumnalis at two forest stand densities (high ≥ 23 m2 ha–1, low ≤ 7 m2 ha–1) and at two elevations (bottom slope = 2390 m, top slope = 2540 m). These experiments were used for constructing life tables of N. autumnalis that compared the effects of host-plant quality on oviposition preference and progeny performance with the effects of natural enemies at different tree densities and elevations.
3. Life-table analyses determined that mortality attributed to host-plant effects during the egg and larval stages had the largest impact on fitness between tree densities and elevations.
4. Natural enemies caused a significant reduction in progeny survival, but their effects were similar across all tree densities and elevations during egg and larval life stages. However, cocoon-stage survival did vary between tree densities and elevations due to natural-enemy effects.
5. It was concluded that the observed oviposition preference for, and higher progeny performance on, trees at low densities and bottom slope elevations were caused primarily by host-plant effects.
6. These results further the argument that heterogeneity at the resource level (i.e. bottom-up forces) determines potential outcomes of multitrophic level interactions.  相似文献   

10.
Species with complex life cycles pose challenges for understanding what processes regulate population densities, especially if some life stages disperse. Most studies of such animals that are thought to be recruitment limited focus on the idea that juvenile mortality limits the density of recruits (and hence population density), fewer consider the possibility that egg supply may be important. For species that oviposit on specific substrata, environmental constraints on oviposition sites may limit egg supply. Female mayflies in the genus Baetis lay egg masses on the underside of stream rocks that emerge above the water’s surface. We tested the hypothesis that egg mass densities are constrained by emergent rock densities within and between streams, by counting egg masses on emergent rocks. All emergent rocks were counted along 1-km lengths of four streams, revealing significant variation in emergent rock density within streams and a more than three-fold difference between streams. In each stream, egg mass density increased with the density of emergent rocks in 30-m stretches. We used regression equations describing these small-scale relationships, coupled with the large-scale spatial variation of emergent rocks, to estimate egg mass densities for each 1-km stream length, a scale relevant to population processes. Scaled estimates were positively associated with emergent rock density and provided better estimates than methods that ignored environmental variation. Egg mass crowding was inversely related to emergent rock density at the stream scale, a pattern consistent with the idea that oviposition substrata were in short supply in streams with few emergent rocks, but crowding did not compensate entirely for differences in emergent rock densities. The notion that egg supply, not larval mortality, may limit population density is an unusual perspective for stream insects. Environmental constraints on egg supply may be widespread among other species with specialised oviposition behaviours.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract.  1. Secondary colonization of leaf shelters constructed by caterpillars has been reported from a number of systems. Both the mechanism (larval or adult movement vs. oviposition) and the cues used by arthropods in locating leaf shelters, however, have received little attention.
2. Artificial leaf shelters (i.e. leaf ties or pairs of leaves clipped together to form sandwiches) were constructed on understorey white oak ( Quercus alba L.) trees and the abundance and species composition of arthropods colonizing and ovipositing on leaf pairs was examined in three treatments: occupied leaf ties (containing a leaf-tying caterpillar), unoccupied leaf ties, and non-tied control leaves.
3. The density of arthropods present in the occupied and unoccupied leaf ties after two weeks was seven and four times greater respectively, than non-tied controls. The guild composition of these early colonists differed among treatments, with the highest densities of leaf chewers, scavengers, and predators in occupied ties and the lowest densities in non-tied controls.
4. The densities of all arthropods ovipositing on leaf pairs in the occupied and unoccupied leaf tie treatments were four and three times greater than non-tied controls. Leaf-chewing insects (including leaf-tiers and non-tying inquiline species) and scavengers showed strong oviposition preferences for tied leaves. However, most species of leaf-tying caterpillars and the psocids (Psocoptera) did not distinguish between occupied and unoccupied ties, suggesting that these groups do not use occupancy-related cues in selecting oviposition sites.  相似文献   

12.
Vegetation structure can profoundly influence patterns of abundance, distribution, and reproduction of herbivorous insects and their susceptibility to natural enemies. The three main structural traits of herbaceous vegetation are density, height, and connectivity. This study determined the herbivore response to each of these three parameters by analysing oviposition patterns in the field and studying the underlying mechanisms in laboratory bioassays. The generalist leaf beetle, Galeruca tanaceti L. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), preferentially deposits its egg clutches on non‐host plants such as grasses. Earlier studies revealed that oviposition within structurally complex vegetation reduces the risk of egg parasitism. Consequently, leaf beetle females should prefer patches with dense, tall, or connected vegetation for oviposition in order to increase their reproductive success. In the present study, we tested the following three hypotheses on the effect of stem density, height, and connectivity on oviposition: (1) Within habitats, the number of egg clutches in areas with high stem densities is disproportionately higher than in low‐density areas. The number of egg clutches on (2) tall stems or (3) in vegetation with high connectivity is higher than expected for a random distribution. In the field, stem density and height were positively correlated with egg clutch presence. Moreover, a disproportionately high presence of egg clutches was determined in patches with high stem densities. Stem height had a positive influence on oviposition, also in a laboratory two‐choice bioassay, whereas stem density and connectivity did not affect oviposition preferences in the laboratory. Therefore, stem height and, potentially, density, but not connectivity, seem to trigger oviposition site selection of the herbivore. This study made evident that certain, but not all traits of the vegetation structure can impose a strong influence on oviposition patterns of herbivorous insects. The results were finally compared with data on the movement patterns of the specialised egg parasitoid of the herbivore in comparable types of vegetation structure.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract.  1. Some organisms respond adaptively to seasonal time constraints by altering development time to life-history transitions (e.g. metamorphosis, oviposition). Such life-history changes may have costs (e.g. reduced fecundity, mass, offspring quality).
2. The hypothesis that a northern population of the grasshopper Romalea microptera (Beauvois) would show adaptive plasticity in oviposition timing in response to seasonal time constraints was tested by manipulating photoperiod to simulate the middle of the active season (Long photoperiod), the end of the active season (Short photoperiod), and seasonal change (photoperiod Declining from long to short). Females received either high or low food rations. Short or Declining photoperiod were predicted to induce early oviposition with costs of reduced egg number, post-oviposition mass, or egg size, particularly in low-food females.
3. Effects of food ration and photoperiod, but not interaction, were significant in failure time analysis of age at oviposition. mancova on age at oviposition, egg number, and post-oviposition mass yielded similar effects. The multivariate effect of photoperiod resulted primarily from reduced time to oviposition in Short or Declining photoperiod. No costs in egg number or post-oviposition mass were associated with this photoperiod-induced reduction in time to oviposition. The multivariate effect of food ration resulted mainly from lower egg number with low food. Food ration affected egg size, but photoperiod and interaction did not. In all cases, Short and Declining photoperiod produced similar effects.
4. In its northern range, R. microptera accelerates reproduction in response to seasonal constraints, a response that may be adaptive. How R. microptera avoids costs associated with this reduced pre-oviposition period remains unknown.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract. 1. The hypotheses that genetic variation in host plant resistance of the arroyo willow affected leaf folder ( Phyllocolpa sp.) (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) density and that genetic variation in shoot length and leaf length was correlated with resistance were tested.
2. Willows grown in pots and exposed to ovipojsition by the leaf folding sawfly in cages had significantly different densities among clones, indicating variation in resistance caused by genetic differences among conspecific host plants.
3. There was a general correspondence between leaf folder density on potted cuttings and on the plants in the field that were the sources of cuttings.
4. In behavioural choice experiments, susceptible clones (with highest leaf fold densities) had the highest oviposition activity of female leaf folders compared to clones that were resistant to the leaf folder.
5. Clones differed significantly in shoot length and leaf length among clones grown in pots, among clones in the field, and between shoots with galls and shoots without galls on clones in the field.
6. Leaf folder density was significantly positively correlated with mean shoot length on field clones in 1985 and 1986, but was not correlated with leaf length, although leaf length and shoot length were correlated.
7. Leaf length variation among willow clones accounted for a significant portion of the variation in resistance of potted willows, but shoot length was unimportant.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract.  1. The annual herb Arabidopsis thaliana is a prime model organism of plant molecular genetics, and is currently used to explore the molecular basis of resistance to herbivores. However, both the magnitude and the causes of variation in resistance among natural populations of A. thaliana are poorly known. The hypotheses (a) that resistance to a specialist herbivore, the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae), is positively related to the density of leaf trichomes, and (b) that oviposition preference by female moths is positively correlated to larval performance on different populations and maternal lines of the host plant were examined.
2. Variation in leaf trichome density and resistance to P. xylostella within and among six natural populations of A. thaliana in Sweden was quantified . Resistance was quantified by examining the number of eggs laid on plants exposed to ovipositing female moths and by monitoring larval development on plants of different origin.
3. Trichome density varied significantly among populations; for 4-week-old plants (exposed to ovipositing moths), it also varied significantly among maternal families within populations. The rate of oviposition varied significantly both among populations and among families within populations. This variation could partly be explained by a negative relationship between trichome density and egg number, and a positive relationship between plant size and egg number. Time to pupation, pupal mass, and time to adult eclosion did not vary among populations or maternal lines of the host plant, and offspring performance was not related to P. xylostella oviposition preference . The results indicate that A. thaliana populations may respond to selection for increased resistance to P. xylostella , and suggest that trichome production contributes to resistance against this specialist herbivore.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract. 1. Previous studies which attempt to relate oviposition by female monarchs, Danaus plexippus (L.), to the cardiac glycosides of their milkweed host plants are reviewed and found to be defective.
2. Here we followed ovipositing females in the field and recorded their oviposition behaviour on individual Asclepias fruticosa (L.) plants. The cardenolide glycoside and per cent nitrogen of each of these plants and also of a control set of plants was recorded.
3. Milkweeds accepted by females, on which egg laying took place, had significantly lower mean cardenolide levels compared with rejected plants and a control sets of plants.
4. Most oviposition ( c. 70%) took place on plants with intermediate cardenolide (CG) levels (=200–300 μg/0.1 g DW).
5. The mean CG level in A.fruticosa was 345 μg/0.1 g DW (SD = 138, n =122, range 119–719).
6. There was no relationship between monarch oviposition behaviour and plant per cent nitrogen.  相似文献   

17.
Size of habitat, availability of oviposition substrate, and population density were manipulated to determine their effects on the structure and dynamics of the pupfish breeding system. The fish established a territorial breeding system in large tanks, irrespective of population density or oviposition substrate. A dominance hierarchy, in which one male controlled most of the oviposition substrate and spawned with most females, was established in small tanks at low densities. Both population density and oviposition substrate affected the number of males defending territories. Male spawning success was inversely related to availability of oviposition substrate, but was not affected either by density or tank size. Location of a territory and its size also influenced spawning success. Males with bigger territories had higher spawning success. A “carryover” effect of neighbors was observed; males with reproductively active neighbors spawned more often than those with less successful neighbors. Interference with spawning was affected both by tank size and density. Agonistic behavior of breeding males was not affected by any manipulation, but it was positively associated with male spawning success at high but not at low densities. In all treatments the mortality of breeding males was approximately 8 times as high as that of females, suggesting that, under these experimental conditions, the cost of reproducing is substantially higher for males. Comparisons between breeding pupfish in these experiments and in natural environments provide a basis for understanding the selective pressures that have favored the maintenance of these extremely plastic breeding systems.  相似文献   

18.
The cabbage stem flea beetle, Psylliodes chrysocephala (L.) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), is a major pest of winter oilseed rape. Despite the importance of this pest, detailed information on reproduction to predict risk of crop damage is lacking. This study investigates the effect of temperature on parameters of reproduction, egg development and viability at five constant temperatures. Significant temperature effects were found on the pre‐oviposition period, total number of eggs laid, daily oviposition rate, female longevity, egg‐development rate and viability. The mean length of the pre‐oviposition period ranged from 93.1 days at 4°C to 14.6 days at 20°C. Analysis of total number of eggs laid and daily oviposition rate during female lifespan estimated the highest total number of eggs laid (696 eggs/female) at 16°C and the highest oviposition rate (6.8 eggs/female and day) at 20°C. The daily oviposition rate at 20°C was not significantly higher than 5.4 eggs/female and day at 16°C. Female longevity was significantly longer at 4°C, shorter at 20°C and not significantly different between 8, 12 and 16°C. Estimated 50% survival time of females was 239, 153, 195, 186 and 78 days at 4, 8, 12, 16 and 20°C, respectively. A linear model of egg development at 8–20°C estimated the lower developmental threshold to be 5.1°C and the thermal constant for development 184.9 degree‐days. The percentage of eggs hatching was significantly lower at 4°C than at all other temperatures tested. The estimated mean hatching percentages were 47.3%, 70.0%, 72.4%, 66.2% and 67.9% at 4, 8, 12, 16 and 20°C, respectively. These results can be used to predict the start and intensity of egg‐laying in the autumn and the appearance of larvae in the field from knowledge about time of field invasion and from monitoring the weather.  相似文献   

19.
In species that lack parental care and whose larvae are restricted to a given space throughout development, choice of egg-laying or reproductive sites often greatly influences fitness. Furthermore, reproductive success of individuals may be affected not only by conditions of the breeding area but also by the time when they start to breed, because intraspecific variation in the timing of breeding may result in asymmetric competition between larvae. We addressed these issues in an experimental and field study of the Japanese brown frog, Rana japonica. We tested whether the survival success of larvae decreased with an increase in the number of deposited egg masses and with a greater delay in oviposition. We found that the number of egg masses and timing of oviposition together significantly predicted larval survival per clutch. Moreover, we observed the natural oviposition of R. japonica to examine the prediction that if the density of larvae and the timing of oviposition affect survivorship of larvae, R. japonica will avoid depositing eggs in pools in which egg masses have already been deposited. We found that for small pools only, R. japonica tended to favor oviposition at unoccupied pools (those lacking egg masses and larvae) in the spawning season. For large pools, however, adults favored those already occupied by egg masses in the spawning period. The density of egg masses and tadpoles or the timing of oviposition may have less effect on spawning or the survival of tadpoles in large pools than in small pools.  相似文献   

20.
Cattle sucking lice, Linognathus vituli (L.) (Phthiraptera: Linognathidae), were obtained from naturally infected cattle and maintained within ‘arenas’ affixed to the backs of cattle confined in controlled environment chambers maintained at a constant temperature of 15 °C. Temperatures measured within the arenas at an ambient temperature of 15 °C were constant at about 34 °C and only slightly above the temperature on nearby skin. The effect of temperature on egg development was determined using a gradient of temperatures between 25 °C and 41 °C. Eggs did not develop at temperatures of < 26 °C or > 39 °C. Survival of eggs was highest at temperatures of 30 °C and 35 °C. The earliest hatch was observed at 5 days post‐oviposition (at 33–35 °C). Development was extended to as long as 13 days at the lower temperatures. Kaplan–Meier survival probabilities were compared for lice kept at two densities in the arenas and showed there to be no effect of density on louse survival. Similarly, the mean number of eggs/louse/day over an 8‐day period was not influenced by louse density.  相似文献   

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