On the Biology and Life History of Rhabditis Pellio (Nematoda)

Parasitology ◽  
1933 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 296-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. W. Otter

1. Accurate measurements were made of adults, larvae and eggs of Rhabditis pellio, representing an average selection for comparison with Johnson's figures.2. The most satisfactory method of culturing the nematodes was in hanging drops, in a medium free from an excess of putrefying bacteria.3. A medium poor in food was found to prolong life (up to 40 days), while a rich medium quickened up the life processes thereby causing death sooner. It is probably partial starvation which prevents the larvae from becoming mature while in the living earthworm.4. In a medium favourable for prolonging life, the males were found to live about one-third as long as the females (F generation). It is probable that the females only live for about 4–8 days in a decaying earthworm after attaining maturity.5. The maximum number of eggs laid per female was 257 (F generation) and 197 (F1 generation). It is probable that between 150 and 300 eggs are laid per female in the natural state. No information was obtained regarding the effect of the various media on egg production.6. In most cases the females died when spent of eggs.7. Vivipary is considered to be due to a favourable environment probably aided by a high temperature.8. Larvae were found to be more susceptible to cultural conditions than the adults, especially those (F generation) which were not bred from females in culture media. The growth-rate of F1 generation larvae was found to be slightly faster in a natural medium, such as earthworm broth, than in peptone.9. The chief food is considered to be bacteria.10. During this work R. pellio behaved entirely as a bisexual species. A few cases of copulation were observed, showing that some of the males had not lost their “sexual instinct.”11. Rhabditis pellio is considered to be a species in which hermaphroditism is just commencing and in which true males and females exist together with hermaphrodite females whose numbers fluctuate, the degree of hermaphroditism possibly bearing some relation to the sex ratio.12. The sex ratio was about 1 ♂: 2 ♀♀, in both the F and F1 generations, but varied considerably. There were a few cases in which the male proportion was equal, or higher, than the female.13. Four different species of British earthworms were examined, each being infected by Rhabditis pellio to a varying extent. Eisenia foetida was, however, rarely infected. Size of the earthworm, in proportion, played no part regarding the degree of infection. There is an indication that the head (segment I to the beginning of the clytellum) is the most heavily infected region.14. A few specimens (larval stage) of an Ascarid, a species of Porrocaecum, a parasite of small mammals and birds, were found in three of the species of earthworms examined.15. A probable course of the life history is given, based on this work and that of Johnson (1913).

1993 ◽  
Vol 41 (5) ◽  
pp. 441 ◽  
Author(s):  
MF Downes

A two-year study of the social spider Badumna candida at Townsville, Queensland, provided information on colony size and changes over time, maturation synchrony, temperature effects on development, sex ratio, dispersal, colony foundation, fecundity and oviposition. Key findings were that B. candida outbred, had an iteroparous egg-production cycle between March and October, had an even primary sex ratio and achieved maturation synchrony by retarding the development of males, which matured faster than females at constant temperature. There was no overlap of generations, the cohort of young from a nest founded by a solitary female in summer dispersing the following summer as subadults (females) or subadults and adults (males). These findings confirm the status of B. candida as a periodic-social spider (an annual outbreeder), in contrast to the few known permanent-social spider species whose generations overlap. Cannibalism, normally rare in social spiders, rose to 48% when spiders were reared at a high temperature. This may be evidence that volatile recognition pheromones suppress predatory instincts in social spiders.


Crustaceana ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 94 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-429
Author(s):  
Ye Ji Lee ◽  
Won Gyu Park

Abstract The population dynamics of Stenothoe valida Dana, 1852 were studied at Cheongsapo beach of Busan, Republic of Korea, from March 2019 to March 2020. Sampling was conducted once a month at low tide during spring tides. Specimens were grouped by the cephalic length at 0.025 mm intervals, and classified into four categories: females, ovigerous females, males and juveniles. The sex ratio, defined as females : total males + females, exceeded 0.5 during most of the study period. Brood size was significantly coupled with ovigerous female size. Two to four cohorts appeared at each study period. New cohorts occurred at almost every sampling except in the samples Jun-2, and Nov-2. Life span was estimated at 1-2 months. The juvenile ratio, the ratio of ovigerous females, and the recruitment rate estimated by FiSAT were commonly high in summer and winter. The life history of S. valida was not coupled with water temperature, but had a strong seasonal pattern.


1976 ◽  
Vol 108 (9) ◽  
pp. 931-934 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Martel ◽  
H. J. Svec ◽  
C. R. Harris

AbstractLaboratory studies on the biology of the carrot weevil, Listronotus oregonensis (LeConte), were performed at 21° and 27 °C. At 21 °C females laid eggs for 88 days on carrot slices and 94 days on foliage. Egg production per female averaged 156 and 175 on slices and leaves respectively. Eggs hatched after 8.3 days incubation and the larval stage comprising four instars was completed in 19.1 days. The prepupal and pupal stages lasted 3.7 and 9.4 days respectively. The complete life cycle including an average preoviposition period of 17 days was 57.6 days. Development was more rapid at 27 °C, with the complete life cycle taking only 37 days.


1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (8) ◽  
pp. 2048-2058 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon F. Bennett ◽  
Terry L. Whitworth

The rate of development of the larvae, postfeeding larvae, puparia, and adults of 10 species of Protocalliphora were studied and differences noted in the rates of development and (or) survival. Larvae of Protocalliphora were photonegative and strongly influenced by thigmotactic stimuli. The method of feeding of the larva is described. Metamorphosis was completed more quickly at higher temperatures than at lower temperatures. Survival of purparia at temperatures of 7 °C or lower was poor and indicated that this stage was not adapted to withstand low temperatures and probably did not survive the winter. Adult Protocalliphora females were longer lived than males, surviving for an average of 70–100 days, with some individuals surviving for over 250 days under laboratory conditions. Adults fed readily on a sugar–protein diet, crushed berries, and certain species of flowers, but most species did not feed on any form of carrion. Adults mated readily in captivity, but none of the seven species tested crossbred. Spermatozoa remained motile in the seminal receptacles for over 100 days. Eggs were laid on a few occasions, but the factors determining egg production were not studied. Adult Protocalliphora were strongly photopositive and became quiescent in the dark. Adult flies rarely became active until a threshold temperature of 15.5 °C; different species had differing threshold temperatures. Adults successfully overwintered in a single field trial.


1977 ◽  
Vol 34 (7) ◽  
pp. 942-953 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Bell ◽  
Paul Handford ◽  
Carl Dietz

The life history of the exploited lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) population of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta, is described. Mean age is high, having increased under continued exploitation during the last 30 yr. A method of estimating the population age structure is described. The apparent annual rate of survival of adult fish has fluctuated markedly, but on average seems to lie in the interval 0.40–0.50; the annual rate of natural survival is estimated to be 0.53. Juveniles survive better than adults. Rate of survival during the 1st yr of life was estimated to be about 0.0002. Maturity was late, the median age at first reproduction being 6–61/2 yr. The regressions of fecundity on age and length are described; length now contributes almost all the attributable variance to maturity and fecundity. The sex ratio fluctuates in time; this is caused by the fluctuations in age structure, since sex ratio varies with age. The relationship between sex ratio and age is used to calculate the relative rates of survival of male and female fish.These data are used to construct a life table and to compute population parameters. It is inferred that the ability of the population to respond to exploitation has been eroded during the last 30 yr. In some respects, the life history of the Lesser Slave Lake stock appears to be unusual.After about 30 yr of large-amplitude oscillation the whitefish population collapsed in 1965. This does not seem to have been caused by chronic overfishing. In the first place, the rate of fishing mortality is no more than moderate. Secondly, a multiple regression equation describing whitefish catch in 48 other Alberta lakes in which there has been no overall decline in catch successfully predicts the observed mean catch at Lesser Slave Lake. The oscillations in catch are claimed to reflect a limit cycle in the abundance of the whitefish, driven by a lagged relationship between a predator (the fishermen) and its prey (the whitefish). Whether or not this cycle was deterministically stable, such behavior will inevitably put the population in risk of extinction during troughs in the cycle. We suggest that current management policies may encourage the destabilization of whitefish populations, and we propose a remedy. Key words: population dynamics, population regulation, life history, exploitation, survival, fecundity, Coregonus clupeaformis


1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1611-1616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen I. C. Hsiao

The morphological life history of the marine brown alga, Petalonia fascia (O. F. Müll.) Kuntze, has been investigated in unialgal culture, using defined culture media with different iodide concentrations. The zoospores produced from the plurilocular sporangia of P. fascia blades developed directly into protonemata, plethysmothalli, or Ralfsia-like thalli, depending upon the iodide concentration. Protonemata and plethysmothalli survived in iodide-free media. For development of Ralfsia-like thalli and blades the minimal iodide concentrations required were 50.76 × 102 μg/1 and 50.76 × 101 μg/1, respectively. Iodine appears to be an essential element for growth, morphogenesis, and reproduction of P. fascia.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 1227-1232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather C. Proctor ◽  
Gordon Pritchard

The life history of a member of the widely distributed Unionicola crassipes complex (Acari: Unionicolidae) in a foothills pond in Alberta, Canada, differs from those previously described for this taxon. Two years are required for a female to develop from an egg to an ovipositing adult. Fertilized females overwinter and oviposit in the sponge Eunapius fragilis in early May. Larvae emerge in late May to early June and parasitize chironomids of the genus Tanytarsus. Engorged larvae drop from their insect hosts and return to sponges for the protonymph resting stage. Active, predaceous deutonymphs develop from protonymphs in early summer. Deutonymphs overwinter and enter the tritonymph resting stage, also in sponges, in early May. Summer adults emerge from the tritonymph stage in late May to early June. Males emerge first, but there is an overall female bias to the sex ratio of emerging adults. Growth of sclerotized and unsclerotized parts occurs in adults over the summer, during which time females appear to suffer greater mortality than males, because the sex ratio is 1:1 in September. It is primarily mated females that overwinter for a second time. A population decline in the summer of 1987 was correlated with degeneration of sponges; variation in the life histories of sponge-associated water mites is discussed in light of this correlation.


Parasitology ◽  
1919 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Ward Cutler

1. Observations on E. histolytica from the human intestine have been made and compared with amoebae living in culture media and in the ulcers of the large intestines of cats, which have died of amoebic dysentery.2. The effects of the substances chlorine, tyrosin, and skatol on culture amoebae have been investigated; it has been found that the two first substances stimulate vegetative reproduction, but that skatol induces cyst formation.3. The changes that the nucleus undergoes preparatory to division and the behaviour of the karyosome during division are fully described. It is shown that the nuclei originally described as characteristic of E. histolytica and E. tetragena are phases of nuclear change in the life history of the same animal.4. Cyst formation and the nuclear divisions in the cysts are described, together with a short discussion as to the view taken that the chromatoid bodies are not comparable with the chromidia of other Rhizopoda.5. Reasons are adduced for the suggestion that during the further development of the cysts quadrinucleate amoebae emerge, which divide to form four small amoebulae.6. Degeneration in E. histolylica is described and the view of Darling, that budding phenomena are degenerative ones, is confirmed.


1960 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 541-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. V. Martin ◽  
N. S. Baldwin

Studies of brook trout × lake trout hybrids planted in Algonquin Park, Ontario lakes since 1954 indicate they are readily available to angling and an excellent game fish. Hybrid trout depth distribution during stratification is between the 8° and 20 °C isotherms. Mayfly nymphs, crayfish, leeches and fish are important in the diet. Hybrids average 12 inches at age II, 16 inches at age III, and 18 inches at age IV. Their length–weight relationship is similar to the lake trout. Most hybrids are mature by age III. Egg production is similar to the brook trout. Hybrids were observed spawning on rocky shoals in early November and had spawning characteristics of each parent. Hybrid trout eggs hatched by the end of April.


1976 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1267-1274 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.G. Wylie

AbstractFemales of Eupteromalus dubius (Ashm.) oviposit on pupae of cyclorrhaphous Diptera and the larvae develop gregariously as ectoparasites. Details of the life history of E. dubius are described. A progressively lower percentage of female progeny of E. dubius matures as the parasite:host ratio increases. Three mechanisms that may cause this sex ratio change are examined and discussed.


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