Parasitism of the commercial sand crab Portunus pelagicus (L.) by the rhizocephalan Sacculina granifera Boschma, 1973 in Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia

1994 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 169 ◽  
Author(s):  
WD Sumpton ◽  
MA Potter ◽  
GS Smith

In Moreton Bay, Queensland, externae of Sacculina granifera Boschma were found in 7.0% of adult males and 123% of adult females of Portunus pelagicus. Infection rates were seasonal for both sexes and higher in the adult female population, with more than 20% of adult females carrying externae during some summer months. Infection rates were less than 3% in areas outside the bay and generally highest in the southern and central bay. Nineteen males and 15 females had abdominal scars where externae had become dislodged. The gonads of most parasitized crabs were underdeveloped, but 5.6% of externa-bearing females and 10% of externa-bearing males also had well developed gonads. Two female sand crabs were found with both a small egg mass and a mature externa (a condition not previously reported). Size distributions of infected and uninfected adult crabs were similar, suggesting that large crabs as well as juvenile crabs were likely to be infected.

2001 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ross L. Goldingay ◽  
Darren G. Quin ◽  
Sue Churchill

A detailed study was conducted over a 12-month period of 10 yellow-bellied glider groups at Nitchaga Creek in north Queensland. Adult gliders were sexually dimorphic in body size and were characterised by yellow ventral fur, which is consistent with southern populations. Gliders lived in groups of 3–6 individuals that occupied exclusive areas of about 50 ha. The structure of glider groups varied enormously: five contained one adult pair, three contained one adult male and 2–3 adult females, and two initially contained 2–3 adult males and one adult female but then persisted as bachelor groups after the death or disappearance of the adult female. Group size changed during the year as offspring matured and as individuals died. One male glider dispersed about 1 km from its natal home-range and became the dominant male in a nearby group. Young were born throughout the year, with a peak in the number of pouch-young in June. This study has confirmed the highly variable social system of the yellow-bellied glider, which appears to be mediated by local resource abundance.


Author(s):  
Simone Rowe

Previous work at Wister Valley Fourche Maline sites in southeastern Oklahoma has concluded that the area was a contested landscape with extensive feuding, resulting trophy-taking behavior, and mass burials. Preliminary paleopathological work at the Akers site (34Lf32) suggested that there may have been a high percentage of broken bones, however complete analyses had not been completed. New paleopathological work at the Akers site indicates that 35 percent of the adults buried there had at least one fractured bone at time of death. Furthermore, adult females were more likely to have lower limb fractures and multiple fractures, suggesting different patterns of stress and/or violence for at least some of the adult female population.


1974 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. K. Wood

AbstractIndividuals of Umbonia crassicornis Amyot and Serville (Homoptera: Membracidae) form aggregations both as nymphs and adults. Each adult female deposits one set of eggs and remains with them. Prior to egg hatching the female moves off the egg mass and makes a series of spiral bark slits with the ovipositor. First instar nymphs aggregate along these slits with the female positioned below the cluster. Adult females use the front tarsi to stroke the backs of moving nymphs to return them to the aggregation.Adult females remain with the nymphs until they become adults. Aggregations of adults fragment when sexually mature; mating takes place before and during dispersal. Mating behavior consists of four components, the precopulatory position being prolonged.


Behaviour ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 61 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 304-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.A. Hinde ◽  
Linda Powell Proctor

AbstractI) Relationships between captive adult female rhesus monkeys were assessed for 6 weeks before and 20 weeks after birth in terms of proximity, approaches and leavings, grooming and agonistic interactions. 2) Before the births, the mothers-to-be spent more time with (and more time grooming with) related than with unrelated individuals. Responsibility for proximity with unrelated adult females to whom the mother was dominant lay primarily with the mother, but where the other female was subordinate it might lie with either party. Mothers-to-be tended to groom adult females dominant to themselves more than they were groomed by them, and vice versa. 3) Differences between the times that mothers-to-be spent near members of different age/sex/rank classes could not be accounted for in terms of generalizations describing preferences of the mothers for members of those classes nor relative preferences of them for her. 4) After the births, members of all age/sex/rank classes tended to be near (and to groom) mothers more when the infants were on the mothers than when they were off but near her, and to be near the mother more when the infants were off but near than when the infants were off and distant from the mother. Proximity between mother and others tended to become more independent of the position of the baby as it developed. 5) Differences between age/sex/rank classes in time spent near the mother after birth were generally similar to those found before birth. The index for the mother's role in maintaining proximity was predominantly negative. 6) All age/sex/rank categories tended to be near the mother less after the birth than before, especially when the infant was off its mother. The differences disappeared with time. Adult males tended to groom the mother less, and adult females to groom her more, than before birth. 7) Changes in proximity between mother and other from before to after birth can be understood in terms of an increase in the attraction of others to mother and a decrease in mothers' affinity for others.


2020 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 927-932 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin J. Wubben ◽  
Amanda G. Gaudin ◽  
Jack C. McCarty ◽  
Johnie N. Jenkins

Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) resistance to root-knot nematode (RKN) (Meloidogyne incognita) is controlled by quantitative trait loci (QTLs) on chromosomes 11 (CHR11) and 14 (CHR14). The individual contributions of these QTLs to resistance are not completely understood. We developed near isogenic lines susceptible at both loci (null), having CHR11 or CHR14 alone, and having both QTLs (CHR11/CHR14). RKN reproduction, postinfection development, egg mass formation, and adult female fecundity were evaluated. Total RKN reproduction was reduced more in CHR14 versus CHR11 but not as greatly as in CHR11/CHR14. Second-stage juvenile (J2) development to the J3 and J4 (J3+J4) life stages was delayed in CHR11, whereas the J2 transition to J3+J4 in CHR14 followed a similar track as in null plants. Development of J3+J4 nematodes to adult females was inhibited in CHR14 at 21 days after inoculation (DAI). Adult female numbers were decreased in CHR11 and CHR14 at 21 and 28 DAI, with CHR11/CHR14 showing an even greater reduction by 28 DAI. The number of egg masses per gram of root at 21, 28, and 35 DAI formed on CHR11 and CHR14 followed a similar track as numbers of adult females. RKN adult female fecundity (eggs/egg mass) was reduced for CHR11 and CHR14 compared with the null at 21 DAI; however, CHR11 eggs/egg mass was only slightly reduced versus the null by 28 DAI. In contrast, CHR14 eggs/egg mass was like CHR11/CHR14, showing a 4-fold decrease compared with CHR11 and the null.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
pp. 1291-1310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evert E. Lindquist ◽  
David Evans Walter

All instars of Antennoseius janus n.sp are described. Adult females occur as two distinct morphs, a nondispersing female with granular soft integument, barbed dorsal setae, emarginated opisthonotal shield, and fully developed sternal shield, and a dispersing female with smooth soft integument, nearly smooth dorsal setae, entire opisthonotal shield, and reduced sternal shield. Granular morph females begin egg production within 3 days of mating; however, smooth morph females delay reproduction for many weeks, apparently to disperse. Adult males and immatures have a granular soft integument and barbed setae similar to the granular morph females. Females produced in single animal or low density cultures (less than six individuals per culture) with excess food are granular morphs, whereas in more crowded cultures 5–100% of the maturing females are smooth morphs. This is the first example of adult female dimorphism confirmed experimentally for any family of mites in the entire order Mesostigmata of the Acari. The impact of this phenomenon on taxonomic concepts in the genus Antennoseius is discussed. A key is included, which distinguishes between the genera Anystipalpus Berlese, 1911 and Antennoseius Berlese, 1916, between the subgenera Antennoseius s.str. and Vitzthumia Thor, 1930, and between the seven forms of Vitzthumia currently regarded as species. All instars of A. janus are voracious predators of nematodes and small arthropods. Development from egg to adult takes 9–11 days on a diet of rhabditid nematodes at 23 °C. Generation time for granular morph females is about 14 days. Females require insemination before eggs can be laid, and the sex ratio is about 1 male: 1.3 females.


Parasitology ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 353-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Zervos

SummaryBlatticola monandros Zervos lives in the hind gut of the endemic New Zealand cockroach Parellipsidion pachycercum Johns. A field survey showed that infection prevalence was high (54 %) in small nymphs and increased further with cockroach size to a maximum (92 %) in penultimate nymphs. Variance to mean ratios and the Chi-square test for goodness of fit of a Poisson distribution provide strong evidence that the distribution of the nematode was not clumped (over-dispersed) or Poisson (random) but under-dispersed in most host size classes. The modal infrapopulation type consisted of 1 adult male and 1 adult female. Other infrapopulations were transitional to this type. Monogamous infrapopulations increased in prevalence with increased host size. Juvenile males were uncommon and probably develop faster into adults than juvenile females. Infrapopulations with 2 juvenile males were very rare and no cockroach contained 2 adult males, although some contained 2 adult females. Seasonal variations in prevalence and infrapopulation structure were slight over a 3 year period, except during one unusually dry summer. During the drought, prevalence of monogamous infrapopulations and of transitional infrapopulations were lowest, while prevalence of single-worm and single-sex infrapopulations were greatest. It is evident that competition between females reduces fecundity. When only 1 adult female nematode is present in an adult cockroach, more eggs are produced than the total produced if 2 adult females are present. Eggs were produced cyclically with short periods of high egg production interspersed with several days of very low or no egg production. Most eggs produced on any one day were attached to the outer surface of only 1 of the up-to-6 faecal pellets produced by the host/day. Mechanisms which may regulate infrapopulations and control reproductive competition and cyclical egg production are discussed. It is suggested that B. monandros regulates its own infrapopulation.


2002 ◽  
Vol 80 (5) ◽  
pp. 951-955 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nancy G Solomon ◽  
Joseph J Jacquot

Many studies have documented intraspecific differences in the behavior of males or females. In some species, many adults are territorial while others have larger home ranges encompassing multiple territories. Although these two types of behavior have been documented, they are not well understood in mammals. Therefore, in the mono gamous prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster) we characterized individuals that engage in these two behavior patterns as residents and wanderers. We monitored populations enclosed in 0.1-ha. enclosures at Miami University's Ecology Research Center. As many as 26% of animals were wanderers: animals captured frequently, but less than 75% of the time, at one nest. As expected, wanderers had larger home ranges than residents. Wanderers were primarily adult males (70%) but included some adult females. This behavior pattern was not fixed, since some wanderers previously had been residents and at least 31% of males and 57% of adult female wanderers became residents during the same field season. Wanderers were not in worse physical condition, as estimated by body mass, and survived for slightly longer than residents. Thus, it does not appear that wanderers are making the best of a bad situation, but analysis of parentage is critical to validate this conclusion.


Parasitology ◽  
1944 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 207-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. Bartley ◽  
Kenneth Mellanby

In a previous paper (Johnson & Mellanby, 1942) an account was given of the numbers ot adult female Sarcoptes and their distribution in 886 cases of scabies. These cases were all adult males and it was desired to complete the study by a similar analysis of the parasitic infection in women and children. The following is an account of the numbers and distribution of mites in 119 women and eighteen children. Owing to the small number of children these figures are only suggestive. As described in the previous paper the mites are first located with the help of a watchmaker's lens and the parasite is then extracted with a mounted needle. Only adult females are extracted. The number of parasites per case is called ‘the parasite rate’.


1968 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald C. Simons ◽  
Ruth A. Bobbitt ◽  
Gordon D. Jensen

2 mother monkeys ( Macaca nemestrina) separated from their infants, 2 adult females without young and 2 adult males were studied to determine activity (pacing) and vocalization in response to taped monkey calls. Stimulus tapes were prepared from two different calls of each of the two infant monkeys and a call of an adult female monkey. Mother monkeys separated from their infants were always more active and vocal than either non-mother female monkeys or males, and their activity and response vocalizations increased during presentations of infant calls. There was no evidence that mothers responded differentially to the calls of their own infants.


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