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母体亲缘关系在杨氏榕树金小蜂后代性比调节中的作用 被引量:4
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作者 宋波 彭艳琼 杨大荣 《昆虫学报》 CAS CSCD 北大核心 2008年第4期411-416,共6页
局域配偶竞争(local mate competition,LMC)理论问世以来在很多方面获得了发展,其中一个观点就是相互作用的繁殖母体之间的亲缘关系越近,后代性比越低,即产生更多的雌性后代。本研究以西双版纳广泛分布的钝叶榕Ficus curtipes上寄生的... 局域配偶竞争(local mate competition,LMC)理论问世以来在很多方面获得了发展,其中一个观点就是相互作用的繁殖母体之间的亲缘关系越近,后代性比越低,即产生更多的雌性后代。本研究以西双版纳广泛分布的钝叶榕Ficus curtipes上寄生的非传粉小蜂杨氏榕树金小蜂Diaziella yangi为研究对象,研究在同一榕果上产卵的繁殖雌蜂之间的亲缘关系对后代性比的影响。处理1:在同一榕果产卵的2头繁殖雌蜂来自蜂源1号树的同一个榕果;处理2:在同一榕果产卵的2头繁殖雌蜂来自蜂源2号树的同一个榕果,处理3:在同一榕果上产卵的2头繁殖蜂分别来自1、2号蜂源树。实验结果却显示出与理论预测值不一致。实验结果中,具有姐妹关系的2头繁殖雌蜂的2个处理的后代性比分别为0.195±0.028和0.189±0.043;亲缘关系较远的2头繁殖雌蜂的后代性比为0.240±0.030;不同处理的后代性比并没有显著差异。说明杨氏榕树金小蜂没有识别相互作用的繁殖雌蜂之间的亲缘关系以及据此调整后代性比的能力,这与其他大量研究结果一致。 展开更多
关键词 钝叶榕 杨氏榕树金小蜂 进化生物学 性比 母体亲缘关系 局域配偶竞争
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Chasing the queens of the alien predator of honeybees: A water drop in the invasiveness ocean 被引量:1
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作者 Karine Monceau Olivier Bonnard Denis Thiéry 《Open Journal of Ecology》 2012年第4期183-191,共9页
The Yellow-legged hornet, Vespa velutina , was accidentally introduced in France in 2004, and then spread rapidly through the French territory but also to adjacent European countries (Spain, Portugal, and Belgium). Du... The Yellow-legged hornet, Vespa velutina , was accidentally introduced in France in 2004, and then spread rapidly through the French territory but also to adjacent European countries (Spain, Portugal, and Belgium). During summer and autumn, V. velutina workers hunt domestic honeybees, Apis mellifera, for feeding their larvae. The impact of this alien species is mainly economic, beekeepers experiencing heavy colony losses, but also ecological, V. velutina hunting other pollinators. In their year-round life cycle, nest initiation by single queen during spring is the critical stage. In invaded areas, spring queen trapping using food baits has been promoted by apicultural unions in order to limit V. velutina population expansion. The goals of this work were 1) to evaluate the yield of this method, 2) to identify appropriate sites for trapping, 3) to identify potential optimal climatic windows of capture, and 4) to quantify the impact on local entomofauna. Our results showed that water proximity enhances trapping but not beehives proximity, and that trapping is inefficient if average week temperatures are below 10°C. Although the trapping effect on biodiversity should be studied more carefully, spring queen trapping is highly questionable unless specific attractants could be proposed. 展开更多
关键词 foundress Invasive Species Metareplication VESPA velutina Yellow-Legged HORNET
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Seed and Wasp Production in the Mutualism of Figs and Fig Wasps 被引量:1
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作者 YaoJin-yan ZhaoNan-xian +3 位作者 ChenYi-zhu JiaXiao-cheng DengYuan YuHui 《Forestry Studies in China》 CAS 2005年第1期25-28,共4页
Figs (Moracea: Ficus) and fig wasps (Hymenoptera: Chlocloids: Agaonideae) depend on each other to complete their reproduction. Monoecious fig species and their pollinating wasps are in conflict over the use of fig ov... Figs (Moracea: Ficus) and fig wasps (Hymenoptera: Chlocloids: Agaonideae) depend on each other to complete their reproduction. Monoecious fig species and their pollinating wasps are in conflict over the use of fig ovaries which can either produce one seed or one wasp. From observation on Ficus virens Ait., we showed that female flowers with outer layer of ovaries (near to the wall of syconium) had no significant difference from that with inner and interval layer of ovaries (near to the syconium cavity), in which most seeds and wasps were produced. This meant that fig tree provided the same potential resource for seed and wasps production. Observation indicated that there was usually only one foundress in syconium at female flower phase and no com- petition pollinators. Measurement of the style length of female flowers and the ovipositor of pollinators indicated that most ovaries could be reached by pollinator’s ovipositor. However, at the male flower phase, production of seeds was significantly more than that of wasps including non-pollinating wasps but there was no significant difference between seed and pollinating wasp production when without non-pollinating wasps produced. This result indicated that non-pollinating wasps competed ovaries not with seeds but with pollinating wasps for ovipositing. Bagged experiment showed that the sampling fig species was not self-sterile which was important for figs and wasps to survive bad season. Seed production in self-pollinated figs was not significantly different from total wasps in- cluding non-pollinating ones. This might be related with the weaker competition among wasps since bagged figs were not easy to reach by wasps from outside. 展开更多
关键词 FICUS Ficus wasp mutualism conflicts seed and wasp production Seed and Wasp Production in the Mutualism of Figs and Fig Wasps Yao Jin-yan1 2 Zhao Nan-xian1 Chen Yi-zhu1* Jia Xiao-cheng1 2 Deng Yuan1 2 Yu Hui1 2 1South China Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou 510650 P. R. China 2Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100039 P. R. China ABSTRACT Figs (Moracea: Ficus) and fig wasps (Hymenoptera: Chlocloids: Agaonideae) depend on each other to complete their reproduction. Monoecious fig species and their pollinating wasps are in conflict over the use of fig ovaries which can either produce one seed or one wasp. From observation on Ficus virens Ait. we showed that female flowers with outer layer of ovaries (near to the wall of syconium) had no significant difference from that with inner and interval layer of ovaries (near to the syconium cavity) in which most seeds and wasps were produced. This meant that fig tree provided the same potential resource for seed and wasps production. Observation indicated that there was usually only one foundress in syconium at female flower phase and no com- petition pollinators. Measurement of the style length of female flowers and the ovipositor of pollinators indicated that most ovaries could be reached by pollinator’s ovipositor. However at the male flower phase production of seeds was significantly more than that of wasps including non-pollinating wasps but there was no significant difference between seed and pollinating wasp production when without non-pollinating wasps produced. This result indicated that non-pollinating wasps competed ovaries not with seeds but with pollinating wasps for ovipositing. Bagged experiment showed that the sampling fig species was not self-sterile which was important for figs and wasps to survive bad season. Seed production in self-pollinated figs was not significantly different from total wasps in- cluding non-pollinating
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