Female polymorphism in Chilothrips strobilus (Thysanoptera: Thripidae), with the first description of the male

Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4358 (1) ◽  
pp. 193 ◽  
Author(s):  
YANZE CUI ◽  
JINGHUI XI ◽  
JUN WANG

Polymorphism and sexual dimorphism are common in insects. Thrips have been reported to exhibit intraspecific variation in body size, color and wing length (Mound 2005), also sexual dimorphism in abdominal pore plates, antennal sensoria and fore leg armature (Tyagi et al. 2008). Chilothrips Hood is a small genus that currently comprises seven species (ThripsWiki 2017), three from USA, one from Japan, and three from China. No male has been reported in the three species from China, C. strobilus, C. jiuxiensis and C. hangzhouensis (Hu & Feng 2015), and C. strobilus was described on three female specimens from cones of Pinus in Liaoning Province, northeastern China (Tong & Zhang, 1994). Recently, we have surveyed different parts of northeastern China and collected many male individuals of C. strobilus. We have observed that this species shows sexual dimorphism in mouth cone length, and remarkable variation in form of abdominal segment X among females. 

1999 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 377-389 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Scott Keogh ◽  
V. Wallach

AbstractWe quantified sexual dimorphism and allometric changes in the lung morphology of 160 juvenile and adult specimens of prairie rattlesnake, Crotalus viridis viridis, from a single population. In virtually all lung components, those of males are located more posteriorly than are those of females of the same body size. Males display a longer vascular component than females but there is no sexual dimorphism in size of the avascular component. Thus, males generally have longer lungs than do females at all body sizes. With increasing body size, the lung components are found more anteriorly, relative length of the vascular lung decreases, and relative length of the avascular lung increases in both sexes. However, total lung length increases isometrically with body size. These sexual and allometric differences suggest that intraspecific variation should be taken into account when lung size characters are used in snake systematic studies.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4614 (1) ◽  
pp. 180
Author(s):  
HÉLCIO R. GIL-SANTANA ◽  
DIEGO L. CARPINTERO

There are 22 genera and more than 100 described species of Ectrichodiinae in the New World (Gil-Santana et al. 2015). Intraspecific variation in coloration and body size have been recorded in several species of the subfamily. These characteristics can occur in the same population or can suggest geographic variation of the same species (Wygodzinsky 1951, Dougherty 1995, Gil-Santana & Baena 2009, Gil-Santana et al. 2013). Sexual dimorphism is also common: females are almost always more or less larger than males, frequently have thicker fore femora and smaller eyes and ocelli (Dougherty 1995). 


2010 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
pp. 463-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hua Feng ◽  
Chungkun Shih ◽  
Dong Ren ◽  
Chenxi Liu

New male pelecinid wasps (Hymenoptera: Pelecinidae) from the Yixian Formation of western Liaoning (China)Two new genera and speciesAbropelecinus annulatusgen. et sp. nov. andAzygopelecinus clavatusgen. et sp. nov., placed in the subfamily Iscopininae of the family Pelecinidae, are described and illustrated.Sinopecinus viriosusZhang, Rasnitsyn & Zhang, 2002 are re-described. All these male specimens were collected from the Yixian Formation of Beipiao City, Liaoning Province, northeastern China. A key to the male species of the subfamily Iscopininae is given. In addition, sexual dimorphism in Pelecinidae and the paleoclimate of the Yixian Formation are briefly discussed.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.I. Miles ◽  
A.V. Jaeggi ◽  
M. Festa-Bianchet ◽  
C. Schradin ◽  
L.D. Hayes

AbstractUnderstanding inter-specific variation in social systems is a major goal of behavioural ecology. Previous comparative studies of mammalian social organisation produced inconsistent results, possibly because they ignored intra-specific variation in social organisation (IVSO). The Artiodactyla have been the focus of many comparative studies as they occupy a wide diversity of habitats and exhibit large variation in life history patterns as well as other potential correlates of social organisation. Here we present the first systematic data on IVSO among Artiodactyla, infer their ancestral social organisation, and test whether habitat, sexual dimorphism, seasonal breeding, and body size predict inter- and intraspecific variation in social organisation. We found data on social organisation for 110 of 226 artiodactyl species, of which 74.5% showed IVSO. Using Bayesian phylogenetic multilevel models, the ancestral artiodactyl population was predicted to have a variable social organisation with significantly higher probability (0.77, 95% CI 0.29-1.00) than any non-variable form (i.e. solitary, pair-living, group-living). Greater sexual dimorphism and smaller body size both predicted more IVSO; smaller body size also predicted a higher likelihood of pair-living. Our results challenge the long-held assumption that ancestral Artiodactyla were pair-living and strongly imply that taking IVSO into account is crucial for understanding mammalian social evolution.


2010 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 401-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew K. Davis ◽  
Steven B. Castleberry

Abstract Mammalian pelage color can vary among individuals of many species, although this intraspecific variation is often overlooked by researchers, perhaps because of its sometimes subtle nature and difficulty in assessing it quantitatively. Thus, such variation is rarely studied in mammals, and this is especially true within the order Chiroptera, where there has been very little empirical research. We examined museum specimens of red bats (Lasiurus borealis, family Vespertilionidae) from Georgia, USA, to determine the extent of sexual dimorphism in pelage color and to explore possible associations between body size and pelage color. We photographed 54 specimens under uniform lighting, and used an image analysis program to measure pelage hue on the uropatagium region, which is fully furred in members of the genus Lasiurus. Statistical analyses of pelage hue scores showed males had significantly redder pelage than females when considered alone, but when examined together with effects of body size and collection year, sex was not significant, and collection year and body size were. More recent specimens tended to be less red than older specimens, which might indicate a wearing of the buffy tips of hairs from older specimens, and smaller bats of both sexes tended to be more red. These interesting findings are encouraging and we suggest that future explorations into intraspecific variation in pelage color of bats using this or similar approaches are warranted to clarify the significance of the patterns. This study also demonstrated that care must be taken in analyses of mammalian pelage color from older museum skins, or at least that researchers must take into account the age of the specimens.


2012 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 508-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanli Yue ◽  
György Makranczy ◽  
Dong Ren

A new species of the staphylinid subfamily Oxytelinae is described and figured from a series of well-preserved compression fossils of the Yixian Formation (Early Cretaceous), Beipiao City, Liaoning Province, northeastern China. The species is placed in the recent genusAnotylusThomson, 1859 based on typical morphological features for the genus as well as secondary sexual characters. The strong projection of the anterior pronotal angles is a feature also possessed by males of several recent Neotropical taxa in the genus. This is the earliest fossil rove beetle with clearly demonstrable sexual dimorphism.


Hydrobiologia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rungtip Wonglersak ◽  
Phillip B. Fenberg ◽  
Peter G. Langdon ◽  
Stephen J. Brooks ◽  
Benjamin W. Price

AbstractChironomids are a useful group for investigating body size responses to warming due to their high local abundance and sensitivity to environmental change. We collected specimens of six species of chironomids every 2 weeks over a 2-year period (2017–2018) from mesocosm experiments using five ponds at ambient temperature and five ponds at 4°C higher than ambient temperature. We investigated (1) wing length responses to temperature within species and between sexes using a regression analysis, (2) interspecific body size responses to test whether the body size of species influences sensitivity to warming, and (3) the correlation between emergence date and wing length. We found a significantly shorter wing length with increasing temperature in both sexes of Procladius crassinervis and Tanytarsus nemorosus, in males of Polypedilum sordens, but no significant relationship in the other three species studied. The average body size of a species affects the magnitude of the temperature-size responses in both sexes, with larger species shrinking disproportionately more with increasing temperature. There was a significant decline in wing length with emergence date across most species studied (excluding Polypedilum nubeculosum and P. sordens), indicating that individuals emerging later in the season tend to be smaller.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 1334-1341
Author(s):  
John Atle Kålås

Data on live birds and previously published data reveal that female Dotterel (Charadrius morinellus) were on average larger than males for all measurements. However, sexual dimorphism on the basis of size appears weaker than expected when Dotterel are compared with closely related monogamous species. Female museum specimens have less disrupted (brighter) plumage colours than males, and dimorphism in plumage is more pronounced than it is in size. A discriminant analysis based on plumage characters did not separate the sexes totally, however. Females moult earlier in the spring than males, but summer plumage is still not fully developed for all females by the first period of pair formation, suggesting that female plumage is most important in reproduction only after the first clutch is complete. No significant differences were evident in wing length and plumage colour between 1882–1917 and 1957–1982. Time–activity studies on the polyandrous Dotterel during the arrival, prelaying, and egg-laying periods showed small differences between the sexes in the amount of time devoted to agonistic and courtship behaviour. Data from prelaying periods showed no difference between the sexes as to who initiates bouts of courtship and agonistic behaviour. The behaviour of paired birds was highly synchronized. Three hypotheses on the slight sexual dimorphism in size and plumage of this polyandrous species are presented and discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 154 (2) ◽  
pp. 259-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather M. Garvin ◽  
Sabrina B. Sholts ◽  
Laurel A. Mosca
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-23
Author(s):  
Yunqi Ye ◽  
Dangpeng Xi ◽  
Lixin Sun ◽  
Dermeval Aparecido Do Carmo ◽  
Lucas Silveira Antonietto ◽  
...  

Abstract Despite the abundant literature on limnic Cretaceous ostracode faunas, the database on mid-Late Cretaceous taxa is still scarce. The Songliao Basin in northeastern China preserves a diverse assemblage of ostracode fossils from the Santonian–Campanian Nenjiang and Sifangtai formations. This rather unique material is of major importance to comprehend Early to mid-Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian–Campanian) limnic ostracode faunas and therefore the evolution of Late Cretaceous basins in China. A study of this fauna was conducted to detail the taxonomy of ostracode species from members 1 and 2 of the Nenjiang and Sifangtai formations in the Songliao Basin. Well-preserved specimens of 14 ostracode species were recovered from samples of the ZKY2-1 well in southwestern Songliao Basin: Scabriculocypris liaukhenensis Liu in Netchaeva et al., 1959, Ilyocyprimorpha netchaevae Su in Netchaeva et al., 1959, Cypridea acclinia Netchaeva in Netchaeva et al., 1959, Cypridea cavernosa Galeeva, 1955, Cypridea gracile Netchaeva in Netchaeva et al., 1959, Cypridea lepida Ye in DOFEAD, 1976, Cypridea squalida Sou in Netchaeva et al., 1959, Fabaeformiscandona? Disjuncta (Hao in Hao et al., 1974), Lycopterocypris profunda Lübimova, 1956, Mongolocypris magna (Hou, 1958), Mongolocypris tera (Su in Netchaeva et al., 1959), Talicypridea obliquecostae (Szczechura and Błaszyk, 1970), Talicypridea reticulata (Szczechura, 1978) and Renicypris renalata (Su in Hao et al., 1974). Four of the species identified received emended descriptions and diagnoses. Other important results include the first discussion on sexual dimorphism in Cypridea acclinia and Fabaeformiscandona? disjuncta, the first study on the ontogeny of Ilyocyprimorpha netchaevae, and the reassignment of Cypridea liaukhenensis to the genus Scabriculocypris. Several species recorded herein are also found in other continental far-eastern Asian basins, while genera range from worldwide to far-eastern Asian distribution; these results support strong affinities among faunas of Mongolia, China, and Japan.


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