Search results for "Parent bug"

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Host-Plant Selection and Predation Risk for Offspring of the Parent Bug

1995

Herbivores, especially specialists, must adapt to characteristics of their host to survive and reproduce successfully (Hardin and Tallamy1992). If offspring survival among different hosts varies, natural selection should lead females to choose egg-laying sites where performance of the progeny will be highest. This is especially true when newly hatched larvae cannot move to another host (Singer 1986), or when searching for new hosts would cause heavy mortality (Singer and Mandracchia 1982). A number of studies have shown that females that search for oviposition sites respond to plant characteristics that are correlated with the nutritional quality of plants for their offspring (e.g., Myers 1…

HerbivoreLarvaNatural selectionbiologyHost (biology)EcologyOffspringHeteropteraParent bugbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPredationEcology
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Parasites and Female Ability to Defend Offspring in the Parent Bug Elasmucha grisea L

2010

The specialist endoparasite Subclytia rotundivertis Fallen (Diptera; Tachiniidae) uses the subsocial parent bug Elasmucha grisea L. (Heteroptera; Acanthosomatidae). The parasite injects a single egg through the upper prothorax of female bugs and after hatching the larval parasites eat their host. Parasitism affected only slightly a female's ability to defend her brood when the nymphs were at the second instar stage. However, with third-instar nymphs, parasitized females responded markedly less to disturbance at all levels of their defensive behaviour. Parasitism reduced female survival and significantly increased the probability of death before the end of maternal care. Thus, the main cost …

Larvaanimal structuresbiologyEcologyHatchingfungiHeteropteraParent bugZoologyParasitismbiology.organism_classificationBroodInstarAnimal Science and ZoologyNymphEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEthology
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