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Sexual size dimorphism in the two spot ladybird beetle <i>Adalia bipunctata</i> : developmental mechanism and its consequences for mating
45
Citations
22
References
2002
Year
Abstract 1. The literature on ladybirds indicates that males are consistently smaller than females but take the same length of time to complete their development. Rearing Adalia bipunctata at 20 and 25 °C confirmed that protandry cannot account for sexual size dimorphism in this species, nor can a difference in egg size. 2. Female larvae consumed more food and had a higher relative growth rate in the fourth instar than did male larvae. 3. When food is limited, small males appear to be more successful at mating than are large males. 4. To account for these results, it is hypothesised that the gonads of male larvae compete more strongly with the soma for resources and that this reduces the growth potential of the soma of male larvae relative to that of female larvae. The greater mating success of small males when food is limited supports the eat or mate hypothesis, which predicts that when food is limited small males will spend less time feeding and more time mating than will large males.
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