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Seasonal variation in parental care, offspring development, and reproductive success in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespillo
Authors:IngE Meierhofer  Horst H Schwarz  Josef K Müller
Institution:Laboratoire Arago, UniversitéParis IV/UA CNRS 117, Département d'Ecologie Evolutive, BP 44, France,;Universität Bielefeld, Biologie VII, and;Universität Freiburg, Institut für Biologie I, Germany
Abstract:1. Beetles of the genus Nicrophorus reproduce on small vertebrate carcasses that they bury in the soil to provide the larvae with food. Usually, both parents cooperate in brood care by feeding and guarding their progeny. 2. In pairs of the common European species N. vespillo, the duration of care depended on the time of year when the beetles reproduced. Both in 1990 and in 1991, male and female parents stayed longer with their broods when reproduction started in spring than when reproduction started in early or late summer. This was probably due to the longer development time of the larvae caused by lower temperatures in spring, because laboratory experiments suggested a strong influence of temperature on both the duration of brood care and offspring development. 3. The number of adult offspring produced by a beetle pair did not vary among different times of the year. 4. The median time required for offspring development, measured as time from burial of the carcass to emergence of young adults, was between 62 and 84 days. When the beetles reproduced in late summer, only about three-quarters of the offspring left the soil and hibernated as adults. The remaining offspring stayed underground and adults appeared on the soil surface the following spring. They still showed the flexible cuticle typical of newly-hatched beetles, suggesting that they may have overwintered in a pre-adult stage.
Keywords:Development time  hibernation              Nicrophorus vespillo            parental care  reproductive success
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