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Food competition among <i>Scotophugu stercoraria</i> Iarvae with emphasis on its effects on reproductive success
48
Citations
13
References
1984
Year
Breeding BehaviorFitnessEntomologySexual SelectionReproduction ResponseLocomotor PerformanceInterspecific Behavioral InteractionPlant ReproductionExtreme VariationAdditive Genetic ComponentPublic HealthReproductive SuccessPlant-insect InteractionPopulation GeneticsBiologyHeritability ExperimentsBody SizeNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyAnimal BehaviorFood Competition
Abstract. 1. Laboratory experiments with yellow dung fly larvae, Scatophaga sfercoraria L. were carried out in the hope of clarifying the causal relationship underlying the extreme variation in body size in wild populations. 2. First, parents were collected in the field and newly hatched larvae exposed to different density levels under two temperature regimes (15°C and 20°C). Second, heritability experiments were done. 3. The results showed that density during the larval stage has a very significant effect on adult size. Male size is more affected than female size and the male larvae spend more time feeding than the female larvae with the result that the males are on average larger. Also, the additive genetic component is of little or no significance, supporting the notion that body size is positively related to fitness. 4. Finally, the results are discussed in relation to field data on the effects of size on both male and female reproductive success.
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