EFFECTS OF THE GREGARIOUSNESS OF LARVAE IN GALLS ON THE REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS OF THE PINE NEEDLE GALL MIDGE, THECODIPLOSIS-JAPONENSIS UCHIDAET INOUYE (DIPT, CECIDOMYIIDAE)
K. Sone, EFFECTS OF THE GREGARIOUSNESS OF LARVAE IN GALLS ON THE REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS OF THE PINE NEEDLE GALL MIDGE, THECODIPLOSIS-JAPONENSIS UCHIDAET INOUYE (DIPT, CECIDOMYIIDAE), Journal of applied entomology, 119(4), 1995, pp. 267-272
The effects of the gregariousness of larvae of the pine needle gall mi
dge, Thecodiplosis japonensis Uchida et Inouye (Dipt., Cecidomyiidae),
on the reproductive success of the midge were examined by field obser
vations and laboratory experiments. The gregariousness of larvae in a
gall did not cause the death of larvae in the gall, and the number of
emerged adults per gall was expected to increase with the number of la
rvae per gall. Gregariousness decreased the size of larvae in galls. T
he decline in the larval size did not cause a simple decline in the nu
mber of eggs deposited per female. Females that emerged from medium si
ze larvae deposited many more eggs than those from large and small lar
vae. The calculated number of eggs deposited per gall increased with a
n increase in the number of larvae per gall from one to five, but not
when the number of larvae per gall was more than six. A simple model s
howed that if a female deposited about 10 eggs per egg cluster the num
ber of eggs deposited by her daughters in the next generation would be
maximum. The oviposition pattern and the gregariousness of larvae in
galls in the field probably offer the midge the maximum reproductive s
uccess.