14 research outputs found

    Parental_Ovipositor_Morphology

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    This folder contains the data for the "Ovipositor Morphology" section of the manuscript. It includes the landmark coordinates and ovipositor size measurements for N. lecontei and N. pinetu

    Host_ Needle_Width

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    This folder contains the data from the "Host needle width" section of the manuscript. It includes both mature and seedling measurement

    BC_Oviposition_success

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    This folder contains the data for the "Impact of oviposition traits on BCL oviposition success" section of the manuscript. It includes ovipositor landmark coordinates, ovipositor size measurements, oviposition pattern, and associated oviposition success for N. lecontei backcross females

    Interspecific_cross

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    This folder contains the data for the "cross oviposition behavior and success" section of the manuscript. It includes oviposition willingness, oviposition preference, and oviposition success for the interspecific crosses

    Parental_Oviposition_Behavior

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    This folder contains the data for the "oviposition behavior" section of the manuscript. It includes oviposition willingness, oviposition preference, Average number of eggs per needle, preslit presence, and egg spacing for N. lecontei and N. pinetu

    Weight vs. fecundity

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    Cocoon mass (mg) and egg number from 15 females that were used to test the hypothesis that cocoon weight is a reliable predictor of female fecundity

    Mating latency data

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    Latency to mating (sec) for individual pairs from two populations (KY and MI) and two cross types (inbred or outbred) that mated. These data were used to test the prediction that inbred pairs would have a greater latency to mating than outbred pairs (due to inbreeding avoidance)

    Cocoon weights for inbred and outbred families

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    Cocoon weights (in g) measured for 13 outbred and 9 inbred families that produced cocoons. Based on the distribution of cocoon weights within each family, we inferred the sex of each cocoon (cocoon weight is sexually dimorphic, with males weighing less than females). These data were used to test the prediction that inbred families would produce smaller female cocoons than outbred families (due to inbreeding depression)

    Surivval data for inbred and outbred families

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    Survival data (# of eggs, larvae, cocoons, and adults; percent survival from egg to hatch, hatch to cocoon, cocoon to adult, egg to cocoon) from 14 outbred and 11 inbred families that were used to test the hypothesis that this species experiences inbreeding depression. Data were transformed prior to analysis (square root for progeny numbers and arcsine of the square root for survival rates)
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