16 research outputs found
The mode of infection with and the distribution of Angiostrongylus cantonensis larvae in the experimental intermediate hoist Biomphalaria glabrata
The suitability of several aquatic snails as intermediate hosts for Angiostrongylus cantonensis
Uptake and fate of specific antibody in feeding larvae of the sheep blowfly, Lucilia cuprina
Responses of mosquitoes of the Anopheles farauti complex to 1-octen-3-ol and light in combination with carbon dioxide in northern Queensland, Australia
Strongyloides spearei n. sp. (Nematoda: Strongyloididae) from the common wombatVombatus ursinus (Marsupialia: Vombatidae)
The ultrastructure ofHaemogregarina sachai (Coccidia; Adeleidea) from the farmed marine flatfishScophthalmus maximus L.
Life-history responses of larviparous Boettcherisca formosensis (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) to larval competition for food, including comparisons with oviparous Hemipyrellia ligurriens (Calliphoridae)
For Boettcherisca formosensis increases in rearing density resulted in lowered larval survivorship, shortened larval development time and production of smaller, shorter-lived adults with reduced fecundity. B. formosensis is larviparous. Average brood size was 17.5±1.0 (mean±SEM) larvae, much less than the average number of mature larvae inside gravid females. Females apparently produced a series of small broods, distributing their offspring over a number of carcasses. Compared with the oviparous Hemipyrellia ligurriens, B. formosensis adults were larger and longer-lived, with a longer larval development time but shorter larval feeding period, but females had a shorter pre-reproductive period, were less fecund, and had a lower life time reproductive investment. B. formosensis had lower relative performance than H. ligurriens over the larval rearing density range, and was more sensitive to increases in density. Although the sarcophagid may be a competitively inferior species, other features (eg larvipary, short larval feeding period and spreading of offspring from a single brood among carcasses) may be of significant adaptive value. -from Authorslink_to_subscribed_fulltex
Habitats of solitary and gregarious species in the Neotropical Zetoborinae (Insecta, Blattaria)
International audienceThe habitats of five species of Zetoborinae are described and some data are presented on population structure and spatial repartition. The Zetoborinae subfamily comprised six species in French Guiana. Five species (Thanatophyllum akinelum, Schultesia nitor, Lanxoblalta emarginata, Phortioeca nimbata, Schizopiliafisslcollis) were observed and their habitats were defined. Some data concerning population structures and spatial repartitions were also presented. Thanatophyllum akinetum was solitary while other species appeared to be gregarious. No familial structure was observed