Gall Site Preference and Intraspecific Competition of Neothoracaphis yanonis (Homoptera: Aphididae)
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
During coevolution of plants and herbivores, natural selection is assumed to increase preference-performance covariance, but some recent studies put that assumption in doubt. Our study of a gall aphid Neothoracaphis yanonis demonstrated that the stem mothers produce galls more abundantly on the leaves at the lowest position on a shoot, and on the basal intermediate part (B-part) of a leaf blade. The leaf position was determined by the synchronization between the appearance of stem mothers and the leaf opening phenology, but the leaf part was chosen by preference of the stem mothers. On this leaf position and leaf part, aphids produced larger galls containing more abundant alates. Thus, our observations support the preference-performance hypothesis. As gall density increased, gall size declined, the percentage of indehiscent galls increased, and the relative abundance of upper-type galls increased. The density effect resulted in promoting the dispersal of stem mothers and reducing fitness of aphids which located on less favorable sites.
- 日本応用動物昆虫学会の論文
- 1996-05-25
著者
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Yukawa J
Kagoshima Univ. Kagoshima Jpn
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Ngakan Oka
Laboratory Of Entomology Faculty Of Agriculture Kagoshima University
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Yukawa Junichi
Laboratory Of Entomology Faculty Of Agriculture Kagoshima University
関連論文
- Synchronization with Host Plant Phenology and Gall Site Preference of Dinipponaphis autumna (Homoptera: Aphididae)
- Gall Site Preference and Intraspecific Competition of Neothoracaphis yanonis (Homoptera: Aphididae)
- Description of a New Gall Midge (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) Causing Galls on Lithocarpus edulis (Fagaceae) in Japan
- Effects of Artificial Leaf Cutting on the Shoot Production of Lithocarpus edulis and Three Other Evergreen Species in Relation to Phytophagous Insects
- Interaction between Lithocarpus edulis (Fagaceae) and the Associated Insects in terms of Infestation, Defoliation, and Lammas Shoot Production
- A New Cecidomyiid Successor (Diptera) Inhabiting Empty Midge Galls