11 research outputs found

    Analysis of variance of egg hatching rate.

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    <p>‘Cross’ refers to the crosses combining infected and uninfected females in all four possible combinations. ‘Male age’ refers to one and three days old males. ‘Age of eggs’ refers to eggs scored at 27 h or 54 h after egg-laying.</p

    Effect of <i>Wolbachia</i> on egg-to-adult survival.

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    <p>Proportion of hatched eggs separated by sex for the infected (LH<sub>M</sub>) and uninfected population (LH<sub>M</sub>-W<sup>-</sup>).</p

    Cytoplasmic incompatibility: male age and embryonic development time.

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    <p>Proportion of unhatched eggs produced from all four combinations of infected and cured males and females. Males of two ages were used (black lines 1-day-old males, grey lines 3-day-old males) and eggs hatch was scored at two different times (first after 27 h and then again after 51 h). For each line there is a letter combination. The first letter correspond to the infection status (U = uninfected, I = infected) of the female (subscripted with ♀), the second letter refers to the infection status of the male (subscripted with ♂). Note that the Y-axis is log transformed.</p

    Pischedda et al. 2015 Evolution data

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    This Excel Spreadsheet contains all of the fitness measurements used in the associated manuscript

    The effect of distance on oviposition preference.

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    <p>A Tukey box plot is shown for each genotype * distance combination; red  =  RAL-555, orange  =  RAL-437, green  =  RAL-208, blue  =  RAL-365.</p

    The effect of ethanol on oviposition preference.

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    <p>A: The effect of ethanol on behavior towards yeast is shown for 13 RAL genotypes at three concentrations of ethanol, where each line is a genotype. B: Plot of mean preference of genotypes in A, at two ethanol concentrations, shows that preferences are highly correlated between ethanol concentrations, with more avoidance of yeast substrate at higher ethanol concentration.</p

    The average number of eggs laid for 282 inbred lines.

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    <p>Minimum sample size per line  = 5 females, mean  = 16.1 females. Variance and sample sizes vary considerably between genotypes (see text), and only means are shown for each genotype, for clarity. On the right, a histogram of the same data is shown.</p

    The average proportion of eggs laid on y<sup>-</sup> media for 213 inbred lines.

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    <p>Variance and sample sizes vary considerably between genotypes (see text), and only means are shown for each genotype, for clarity. On the right, a histogram of the same data is shown. Minimum sample size per line  = 5 females, mean  = 11.6 females.</p
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