- Constrained oviposition and female-biased sex allocation in a parasitic wasp
- 作者: Ode, P.J.; Antolin, M.F. and Strand, M.R
- literature id: 36317
- catalog nub: TPL_ODEnnn1997COAFS54705550
- 文献库: Taxapad收录文献
- type: article
- publication name: Oecologia (Heidelberg)
- publish date: 1997-02-01
- pages: 547-555
- volume: 109
- issue: 4
- 创建时间: 2021-03-02 15:00:32
- create by: zxmlmq (admin)
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comment:
none Bracon hebetor; SEX-DETERMINATION; EGG-LAYING; MATING-; POPULATION-SEX-RATIO; Female biased sex allocation, effects of constrained oviposition; WISCONSIN-; Dane County, Madison; Constrained oviposition, effects on female biased sex allocation In haplodiploid organisms such as parasitic wasps, substantial oviposition by females without sperm is predicted to cause mated females to bias their offspring sex ratios towards daughters. The effect of the production of sons by unmated and sperm-depleted (constrained) females on sex allocation by mated females was studied in two populations of the parasitic wasp Bracon hebetor over 3 years. B. hebetor females who depleted their sperm reserves from prior matings rarely remated and became constrained to produce only sons. Constrained females readily oviposited and produced clutches similar in size to those produced by mated females. Although the fraction of constrained females in the population varied considerably between sites and sampling dates, it was usually high enough to favor the production of female-biased sex ratios by mated females. Mated females consistently produced female-biased sex ratios. However, we found no evidence that the sex ratios produced by mated females from the field shifted in relation to the proportion of constrained females in the population. Females held with males or held in isolation also produced female-biased sex ratios. These findings suggest that, in B. hebetor, mated females produce sex ratios that reflect the average fraction of constrained females over evolutionary time.
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