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      Some Maternal Influences on Progeny Quality in the Western Tent Caterpillar, Malacosoma pluviale (Dyar)

      The Canadian Entomologist
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          The different types of individuals among the progeny of the western tent caterpillar, Malacosoma pluviale(Dyar), are concentrated in different parts of the egg mass. The most agile progeny come from some of the first eggs laid, and the least viable are among the last deposited. There is evidence that this serial arrangement stems from unequal partitioning of the maternal food reserves during egg production: a relationship similar to that recently demonstrated in the spruce budworm by I. M. Campbell. In M. pluviale, however, there also is evidence that the differences in feeding rate and food capacity displayed by the different types of females during their own larval stage affect the proportions of the various types of progeny per egg mass as well as the viability of consecutive groups of eggs within the mass. Although these maternal influences are not heritable in the usual genetic sense, they are clearly transmissible between generations. And field studies have shown that their more adverse consequences for local populations are cumulative and ultimately lethal.

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          Most cited references6

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          Quantitative Studies of the Food of Linyphia triangularis Clerck (Araneae: Linyphiidae)

          This work, designed to provide an estimate of the quantity of food consumed by spiders, was part of a more general study of the ecology of a spider population in a stand of oaks (Quercus roburL.) in Wytham Wood, Berkshire, England (Turnbull, 1960a, 1960b).Linyphia triangularis(Clerck) was selected as a test spider for the following reasons: it is a common, easily recognized, and easily acquired species; its size closely approximates the mode size of spiders in the population under observation; as far as it may be said of any spider,L. triangularispossesses few specialized features or habits; and the species is amenable to laboratory rearing and manipulation.
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            INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES AS A FACTOR IN POPULATION DYNAMICS: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A PROBLEM

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              QUALITATIVE CHANGES IN NATURAL POPULATIONS DURING CHANGES IN ABUNDANCE

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                The Canadian Entomologist
                Can Entomol
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0008-347X
                1918-3240
                January 1965
                May 2012
                : 97
                : 01
                : 1-14
                Article
                10.4039/Ent971-1
                8ddaa4e2-2a7c-44ec-871c-5114ad2d4125
                © 1965
                History

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