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Showing papers in "Biological Journal of The Linnean Society in 1981"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It can be shown that the ESS allocation to male function always decreases as selling increases, and it is argued that the concavity or convexity of the curve relating female fertility to male fertility is not a good guide to when hermaphroditism should exist when there is some selfing.
Abstract: The question of“how a self-fertile hermaphrodite will distribute the resources that it allocates to reproduction is studied by means of the ESS approach. Different models of the relations between allocation to male function, the male and female fertilities, and the selfing rate, yield different conclusions about how much resource should be allocated to male function. Values below a half are obtained with one model, while another can give values greater than a half. Even with no selfing, values other than a half are usually obtained; with both models studied, the values decrease with increasing selling. If the selfing rate is assumed to be independent of the fraction of resources allocated to male function, it can be shown that the ESS allocation to male function always decreases as selling increases. The types of relations that might be expected in species with different types of breeding biology, and some data on allocation to male function, are reviewed. The implications for the fitness of male- and female-sterility mutations are discussed. It is argued that the concavity or convexity of the curve relating female fertility to male fertility is not a good guide to when hermaphroditism should exist when there is some selfing. Even with a concave relation, male-sterility mutants can have a higher fitness than hermaphrodites, if there is some selling and inbreeding depression. Also, when the selfing rate depends on allocation to male I unction, an hermaphrodite ESS does not always exist when the function is concave (as it does when there is no selfing), and such an ESS may exist when the relation is convex. The fitness of male- or female-sterility mutants may also depend on the existence of ‘fixed costs’. It is shown that these do not ailed the ESS allocation of resources.

420 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To explain the adaptive significance of sex role partitioning and reversed sexual size dimorphism among raptors, owls and skuas, where females are usually larger than males, this work combines several previous hypotheses with some new ideas.
Abstract: To explain the adaptive significance of sex role partitioning and reversed sexual size dimorphism among raptors, owls and skuas, where females are usually larger than males, we combine several previous hypotheses with some new ideas. Owing to their structural and behavioural adaptations for prey capture, predatory birds have better prospects than other birds of defending their offspring against nest predators. This makes sex role partitioning advantageous; one parent guards the offspring while the other forages for the family. Further, among predators hunting alert prey such as vertebrates, two mates because of interference may not procur much more food than would one mate hunting alone. By contrast, two mates feeding on less alert prey may together obtain almost twice as much food as one mate hunting alone. For these reasons, partitioning of breeding labours might be adaptive only in predatory birds. An initial imbalance favours female nest guarding and male foraging: the developing eggs might be damaged if the female attacks prey; their mass might reduce her flight performance; she must visit the nest to lay; and the male feeds her before she lays (‘courtship feeding’). Increased female body size should enhance egg production, incubation, ability to tear apart prey for the young, and, in particular, offspring protection in predatory birds. Efficient foraging during the breeding period then becomes most important for the male. This imposes great demands on aerial agility in males, particularly among predators of agile prey. Flight performance decreases with increasing size in five of six aspects explored. The male must therefore not be too large in relation to the most important prey. For these reasons, he should be smaller than the female. Among predatory birds, size dimorphism increases with the proportion of birds in the diet, which may be explained as follows. Adult birds have mainly one type of predators: other predatory birds. Because almost only these specialists exploit adult birds, they carry out most of the cropping of this prey. A predator of easier prey competes with many other kinds of predators, which considerably reduce prey abundance in its territory. This is not so for predators of adult birds. Further, because birds are extremely agile, the specialized predator can hunt efficiently only within a limited size range of birds, whose flight skill it can match. Increased size dimorphism among these predators therefore should be particularly important for enlarging the combined food base of the pair. A bird specialist may consume much of the available prey in the suitable size range during the breeding period. When the predator's young are large enough to defend themselves, the female aids better by hunting than by guarding the chicks. It is advantageous among bird specialists if she hunts prey of other sizes than does the male, who has by then reduced prey abundance in his prey size class. But among predatory birds hunting easier prey the female gains little by hunting outside the male's prey spectrum, because other kinds of predators will have reduced the prey abundance outside as well as inside the male's preferred size range. Intra-pair food separation through large sexual size dimorphism therefore should be particularly advantageous among predators of birds. This may be the main reason why the degree of size dimorphism increases with the dietary proportion of birds.

335 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that relative importance of digestion-inhibitors, low nutrient content and toxins as constraints on food selection by generalist herbivores will vary greatly among forests with different nutrient and secondary chemistry profiles.
Abstract: Black colobus monkeys (Golobus salanas) in the Douala-Edea Reserve, a rain-forest on the coast of Cameroon, have been shown to avoid young and mature leaves of most of the common plants in their habitat and to feed disproportionately heavily on leaves of rare plants. The proportion of leaves in the diet was low compared to most colobines studied, and the monkeys spent over half their feeding time eating seeds. Patterns of food selection were analysed in relation to distribution of nutrients, digestion–inhibitors and toxins in the vegetation. Colobw satanas select food items that are rich in mineral nutrients and nitrogen and low in content of the general digestion-inhibitors, lignin and tannin. They achieve this in the following ways: (i) by feeding preferentially on young leaves, which have higher nutrient content and lower contents of digestion-inhibitors than mature leaves; (ii) by eating those mature leaves with highest nument content relative to content of digestion-inhibitors; and (iii) by eating seeds, which are sources of readily available energy and which, as an item class, are less rich in digestion-inhibitors. Seeds at Douala-Edea appear to contain Ins nitrogen than leaves and C. satanas selects those seeds with highest nitrogen content. It is suggested that seed-feeding may be facilitated by the ability of the forestomach flora of these ruminant-like monkeys to detoxify some of the secondary compounds contained in seeds. Avoidance of most unused young and mature leaf items is correlated with a low nutrienudigestion-inhibitor ratio; avoidance of most unused seeds could be accounted for by their low nitrogen contents. Most items whose avoidance could not be explained in terms of these major constraints on food selection possess secondary compounds likely to be toxic. It is proposed that relative importance of digestion-inhibitors, low nutrient content and toxins as constraints on food selection by generalist herbivores will vary greatly among forests with different nutrient and secondary chemistry profiles.

321 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two functional hypotheses are proposed: mustelids and felids have the most powerful bites and canids the weakest among the four family groups studied; and visual abilities are best developed among felids and least developed amongmustelids.
Abstract: Fifteen variables, selected primarily to reflect functionally significant aspects of cranial morphology, were measured on one skull each of 62 species of modern carnivores, including viverrids, canids, mustelids and felids. To allow comparisons between species of different sizes without the potentially confounding effects of allometric shape changes, the measurements were transformed to dimensionless variables, based on the residuals from allometric equations. Fourteen out of 15 of the transformed variables distinguish one or more of the four family groups and the rotated first two axes of a principal components analysis distinguish all four families from each other. The following functional hypotheses are proposed: mustelids and felids have the most powerful bites and canids the weakest among the four family groups studied; mustelids and, to a lesser degree, felids have more powerful neck musculature than do canids and viverrids; and visual abilities are best developed among felids and least developed among mustelids. The first two functional hypotheses suggest possible differences in killing behaviour, which are supported by a preliminary survey of the literature on such behaviour. Allometric analysis of the 15 cranial measures shows that the neurocranial components scale with negative allometry, while most of the other measures scale approximately isometrically.

278 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The statistical framework of maximum likelihood estimation is used to examine character weighting in inferring phylogenies and provides a spectrum of intermediates between these methods that may be of use in analysing real data.
Abstract: The statistical framework of maximum likelihood estimation is used to examine character weighting in inferring phylogenies. A simple probabilistic model of evolution is used, in which each character evolves independently among two states, and different lineages evolve independently. When different characters have different known probabilities of change, all sufficiently small, the proper maximum likelihood method of estimating phylogenies is a weighted parsimony method in which the weights are logarithmically related to the rates of change. When rates of change are taken extremely small, the weights become more equal and unweighted parsimony methods are obtained. When it is known that a few characters have very high rates of change and the rest very low rates, but it is not known which characters are the ones having the high rates, the maximum likelihood criterion supports use of compatibility methods. By varying the fraction of characters believed to have high rates of change one obtains a ‘threshold method’ whose behavior depends on the value of a parameter. By altering this parameter the method changes smoothly from being a parsimony method to being a compatibility method. This provides us with a spectrum of intermediates between these methods. These intermediate methods may be of use in analysing real data.

258 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There are in fact three major criteria dividing six phenomona, rather than a single dichotomy between mimicry and crypsis, and each author's definition includes differing and partially overlapping subsets of the six classes:crypsis; masquerade; Batesism; Mullerism; polymorphism and convergence.
Abstract: There have been many different and conflicting definitions of mimicry. Some of the definitions of mimicry include crypsis and others do not. Each definition includes different groups of phenomena and uses different criteria to distinguish mimetic from non-mimetic phenomena. The confusion is eliminated by a consideration of the criteria of all definitions. This shows that there are in fact three major criteria dividing six phenomona, rather than a single dichotomy between mimicry and crypsis (Table 2). The criteria are defined by the results of a mistake in discrimination between the model and mimic: (a) the mistake does or does not depend upon relationship between mimic and background; (b) the mistake has or has no effect on the population dynamics or evolution of the model and (c) the mistake affects dynamics or evolution of one or of many models. The main reason for the contusion about mimicry and crypsis is that each author's definition includes differing and partially overlapping subsets of the six classes: crypsis; masquerade; Batesism; Mullerism; polymorphism and convergence.

242 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A survey of skull shape in modern fissiped (land) carnivores that includes most of the living genera finds some procyonids, ursids and mustelids display a range of diversity of skull morphology that overlaps that of the other families and diminishes the potential value of the measurements as taxonomic characters.
Abstract: Fifteen functionally significant aspects of skull morphology were measured on skulls of 36 additional species of carnivores to complete a survey of skull shape in modern fissiped (land) carnivores that includes most of the living genera. The measurements were transformed to dimensionless variables based on the residuals from allometric equations, and were analysed singly and in a 10 variable principal components analysis. An initial study of 62 species of viverrids, canids, mustelids and felids had shown those families to be distinguished from each other by the functionally significant measurements. However, among the additional 36 species, some procyonids, ursids and mustelids display a range of diversity of skull morphology that overlaps that of the other families and diminishes the potential value of the measurements as taxonomic characters. Intraspecific variation is presented for 12 species, and is low enough to allow use of some features as species level diagnostic characters. The lack of correlation between diet and functionally significant aspects of skull morphology among omnivorous carnivores, and the absence of certain skull shapes among carnivores are discussed.

148 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Central American toad, Bufo marinus, has been extensively introduced throughout the Caribbean and Pacific regions and is now one of the most widespread of terrestrial vertebrates.
Abstract: The Central American toad, Bufo marinus, has been extensively introduced throughout the Caribbean and Pacific regions and is now one of the most widespread of terrestrial vertebrates. Details, such as the sources and dates of introductions, the number of individuals introduced and the fates of the introduced populations have been documented and are described. The availability of this historical information makes the introductions of great potential value as a series of evolutionary experiments. They can be used to study the way in which allopatric populations diverge genetically and the effects of population bottlenecks of known size on the genetic characteristics of populations, and to examine theories of rapid speciation caused by genetic revolutions associated with founder events.

144 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a population of adders (Vipera berus) in Southwest Sweden, melanistic males were heavier than normal coloured males of the same length and Victory in male-male sexual combats was positively related to size.
Abstract: In a population of adders (Vipera berus) in Southwest Sweden, melanistic males were heavier than normal coloured males of the same length. Victory in male-male sexual combats was positively related to size. Higher risk of predation in the black morph was inferred from experiments showing a high predator attack rate on models of the black morph. Even the bright colour in newly moulted basking males of the normal morph gives cryptic protection. In females, melanism probably also affects body size and risk of predation by visually searching predators. The thermoregulatory influence of black colour, the reproductive success and the maintenance of two colour morphs in the population are discussed.

130 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Data presented here show that the productivity of the environment for mammal species decreases with increasing body size, and the home range is shared with an increasing number of conspecifics in larger herbivore species.
Abstract: Harestad & Bunnell (1979) showed that, at least for North American species, home ranges of large herbivorous mammals are relatively larger than we would expect on metabolic grounds, and suggested that the productivity of the environment for mammal species decreases with increasing body size. This interpretation assumes that the number of conspecifics that share an individual's home range is independent of body size. Data presented here show that this is not true for the species in their sample; the home range is shared with an increasing number of conspecifics in larger herbivore species. The productivity of the environment for a species is independent of body size and the area available to an individual for its own use scales approximately as do individual metabolic requirements. These results agree with conclusions based upon the scaling of population density with body mass and illustrate the interrelationship between home range and dietary and social organization trends among mammalian herbivores. Individual home range area is a function of the way in which the local population of a species, not merely an individual, exploits the environment.

124 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The susceptibility to the Cynipid Leptopilina boulardi was estimated in the seven sibling species of Drosophila belonging to the melanogaster subgroup, suggesting an important role in the competition between these species in Africa.
Abstract: Parasitic wasps are an important component of the niche of Drosophila species. The susceptibility to the Cynipid Leptopilina boulardi was estimated in the seven sibling species of Drosophila belonging to the melanogaster subgroup. Three categories of Hies can be distinguished, according to the level of cellular immune reaction and success of parasitism. Drosophila melanogaster and D. mauritiana belong to the category 1, specified by no encapsulative reaction and a high rate of successful parasitism. Category 2, characterized by a moderate encapsulation rate and a high mortality include D. simulans.5, D. erecta and D. orena. Category 3, with D. yakuba and D. tcissien, is specified by a very low rate or absence of successful parasitism due to a highly efficient immune cellular reaction. This classification parallels the phylogenic relationship based upon polytene chromosome banding sequences. Such specific ditferences in susceptibility to parasites may plan an important role in the competition between these species in Africa.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Observations of several plant species suggest that individuals incur greater herbivore damage in shaded than in nearby sunny areas, and a preliminary test of one suggests that plants growing in the sun are usually tastier, although eaten less, than those in the shade.
Abstract: Observations of several plant species suggest that individuals incur greater herbivore damage in shaded than in nearby sunny areas. Two hypotheses are presented to explain this pattern of herbivory; a preliminary test of one suggests that plants growing in the sun are usually tastier, although eaten less, than those in the shade. The phenomenon has several implications for the nature of plant-herbivore interactions in terrestrial communities.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An examination of possible prosobranch precursors of opisthobranchs and pulmonates suggests that archaeogastropods are poor candidates, as they lack the complex female glands which characterize all higher gastropods.
Abstract: An examination of possible prosobranch precursors of opisthobranchs and pulmonates suggests that archaeogastropods are poor candidates, as they lack the complex female glands which characterize all higher gastropods. Similarities between members of the Rissoacea and Cerithiacea with the Opisthobranchia and Pulmonata are here considered to be a result of parallel evolution. Much of the basis for suggesting phylogenetic aRinities between members of these taxa hinges on the supposition that pyramidellids are opisthobranchs. This contention is questioned, as the euthyneurous nervous system and hermaphroditic reproductive system share weak structural and positional homologies with opisthobranchs. The range of morphological variation within the Pyramidellidae should be more thoroughly investigated, as this taxon is poorly known. The reproductive system of members of the Littorinacea is largely homologous with that found in the least derived opisthobranchs and pulmonates. This, when considered in conjunction with other morphological and palaeontological evidence, suggests that the least derived mesogastropods, the Littorinacea, provide a more precise model of the opisthobranch-pulmonate ancestor among living prosobranchs. The specialization of the digestive system in littorinaceans suggests that morphological divergence has taken place following the cladogenesis of these taxa, and that a direct ancestor/descendent relationship cannot be implied from extant littorinaceans. The status of Acteon and other acteonids as archetypal opisthobranchs is questioned. Moditication 01 all morphological systems, with the exception of the shell and mantle complex, diminish the position of the Acteonidae as ancestral opisthobranchs. Members of the Ringiculidae more closely approach the ancestral form, but have undergone modification, as well. No extant opisthobranch retains all plesiomorphic character states. For this reason, in addition to the fact that contusion exists as to the plesiomorphic conditions of some characters within the Opisthobranchia, a hypothetical ancestral opisthobranch is characterized. It appears that parallel evolution, which confounds the relationships of certain prosobranchs and opisthobranchs, is also evident within the Opisthobranchia. Much of the confusion that has surrounded the determination of phylogenetic relationships within the Opisthobranchia relates directly to the high incidence of parallelism throughout the subclass.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper addresses the limitations under which selection acts to favour the evolution of one or the other of these nutrient-gathering tactics, which have evolved independently at least six times under similar ecological conditions.
Abstract: Insectivorous plants and ant-fed plants represent the two ways in which plants have evolved to utilize directly nutrients derived from animals. This paper addresses the limitations under which selection acts to favour the evolution of one or the other of these nutrient-gathering tactics. Both tactics have evolved independently at least six times under similar ecological conditions, indicating that the evolutionary solutions to ecological problems are limited by the historical make-up of communities and are, to some extent, predictable. Both insectivorous and ant-fed plants evolve in environments with very low levels of availability of nutrients in the substrate; the primary use of the animal-food is probably nitrogen; the vast majority of species are perennial, and most species are tropical or subtropical, although some insectivorous genera are primarily temperate. Although these two nutrient-gathering tactics evolve in response to similar ecological problems, whether plants evolve an insectivorous habit or the ant-fed habit depends on the growth forms of the plants and the habitats in which they grow. Most insectivorous plants evolve as herbs in wet, sterile soils or in sterile aquatic habitats; ant-fed plants evolve as epiphytes on trees in open-canopied habitats. These kinds of animal-plant interactions are relatively rare because the environments in which they are favoured by selection are uncommon.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Over the first six months of life a significant increase in the frequency of linamarase containing individuals occurred, which may have been due to selection at the enzyme locus alone, or to selection favouring cyanogenic individuals which possess both cyanogenic glucosides and enzyme.
Abstract: Seed populations of white clover polymorphic for the presence/absence of both ovariogenic glucosides and the hydrolysing enzyme linamarase, were introduced into three natural populations. Over the first six months of life a significant increase in the frequency of linamarase containing individuals occurred. Estimated selection coefficients against plants lacking linamarase were in the region of 0.3. This result may have been due to selection at the enzyme locus alone, or to selection favouring cyanogenic individuals which possess both cyanogenic glucosides and enzyme.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The geographic variation of 33 morphological characters of two morphs of the gall-forming aphid Pemphigus populitransversus is studied in 214 locality samples.
Abstract: The geographic variation of 33 morphological characters of two morphs of the gall-forming aphid Pemphigus populitransversus is studied in 214 locality samples. Among-locality variation ranges from 1 to 69% in the elongate morph and from 0 to 44% in the globular morph. The design of the study permits separation of interlocality correlations from intralocality correlations. The former are partly a function of the latter, confirming early observations on another Pemphigus species and on ticks. Factor analyses of both correlation matrices for both morphs yield four factors. Within localities these factors agree for the two morphs; among localities only one factor corresponds. Multiple discriminant analyses among localities of the two data sets do not correspond. There is little correlation between characters of stem mother and alate morphotypes within localities but such correlations are strong among localities. Maps are furnished for characters representing the independent dimensions of variation for each morph. Patterns of variation are shown to be significant by spatial autocorrelation analysis for both morphs but are much more marked in the elongate morph. Significant positive autocorrelation occurs up to 1000 km in the elongate morph – mostly only up to 200 km in the globular morph. There are two to three geographic variation patterns in the elongate morph, whereas in the globular morph the classes of patterns are less well defined and involve few characters. The environmental factors to which the globular and elongate morphs are adapting would appear to have different autocorrelation patterns. In each morph the patterns are clearly different and cannot be explained by a single microevolutionary process. The findings are compared with an earlier study in the related and largely sympatric P. populicaulis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The genetic relationships among 30 populations of 11 species and five genera of North American Unionidae were assessed by using standard allozyme procedures, with emphasis on relationships among populations and species of Elliptio and Fusconaia.
Abstract: The genetic relationships among 30 populations of 11 species and five genera of North American Unionidae were assessed by using standard allozyme procedures. Emphasis was on relationships among populations and species of Elliptio and Fusconaia. Multi-dimensional scaling based on a matrix of Nei's (1972) genetic distances substantiated the immunoelectrophoretic results of Davis&Fuller 1981, which demonstrated the distinct and divergent taxonomic groups Anodontinae, Margaritiferinae, and Ambleminae, plus die close relationship of Elliptio and Fusconaia, which justifies their inclusion within the same tribe. Genetic distance appears to increase regularly with time since divergence of taxa. The E. complanata species group is an apparently recent radiation and probably is actively radiating today. The I values among species of this group range from 0.90 to 0.99. Considerable heterozygosity, numerous polymorphic loci, and much interpopuladon phenotypic diversity was also recorded for this group. Some taxa mat have been considered synonyms are demonstrated to be valid species. Reasons for the low genetic distances among unionid taxa are discussed. Standard allozyme analyses are shown to be of great value for assessing relationships among unionid taxa.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Differences between six apomictic clones of dandelions as measured by dry weight increment are described and it is suggested that mere is a genotype x environment interaction and that reproductive allocation in one site cannot be used as a predictive measure of reproductive allocations in a second site.
Abstract: The paper describes differences between six apomictic clones of dandelions as measured by dry weight increment when grown in competition with one another and when grown in competition with different grasses and as measured by leaf turnover, flowering and seed production of transplants in two different sites. The results suggest that mere is a genotype x environment interaction and that reproductive allocation in one site cannot be used as a predictive measure of reproductive allocation in a second site. The interactions between the dandelion clones and the grasses are interpreted in relation to the genetic uniformity within clones and are contrasted with similar interactions observed in sexual herbaceous species.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Methods are described for the visualization of 20 enzymes from the house sparrow, Passer domesticus, in starch gels and by iso-electric focussing, which shows that the level of heterozygosity in these birds is higher than an introduced population in Australia.
Abstract: Methods are described for the visualization of 20 enzymes from the house sparrow, Passer domesticus, in starch gels and by iso-electric focussing. Many of the methods are applicable to other avian species. Two samples of sparrows from the east midlands of England have been analysed. The patterns that are manifest in the gels can be ascribed to between 33 and 35 loci, of which the same nine are polymorphic in both samples. The level of heterozygosity in these birds is about 15%, which at first sight is higher than an introduced population in Australia. However, this difference disappears when homologous loci are compared.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Choice between males with or without display sites, on gross plumage and display differences, provides an alternative explanation for the evolution of the males' plumage.
Abstract: A study of the Great Argus pheasant Argusianus argus is described. Cleared display sites are owned each by a single male which calls to attract females, while other adult and subadult males maintain no such sites. Evidence is presented to show that vocal differences between males at display sites are slight and unstable, and are therefore unlikely to be used by females in mate choice. No evidence was obtained to suggest that females wander from display site to site and mate with the best male chosen by visual comparison of subtle plumage variation, although the classical assumption has been that such choice accounts for the evolution of the males' extravagant plumage. Females may by chance meet males without display sites at random in the forest, but the displays of such males are probably insufficiently stimulating to induce the female to copulate. Choice between males with or without display sites, on gross plumage and display differences, provides an alternative explanation for the evolution of the males' plumage.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Allometric relationships between the area of the shell mouth and live body weight are examined in 19 species of British land snails and it is suggested that large species are limited in the range of possible shell geometries by the need to minimize loading, while in small species other forces such as desiccation and predation may also be important.
Abstract: Allometric relationships between the area of the shell mouth and live body weight are examined in 19 species of British land snails. Within species, the rate of increase of mouth area on weight is usually less than the isometric expectation, in spite of the logarithmic spiral pattern of growth in most species. It is suggested that this deviation is due mainly to changes in density with size. Two species which conform to isometric expectation alter the geometry of the shell as they pow. Between species, the rate of increase in mouth area on weight in adults is much greater than isometric expectation, and the range of mouth areas at standard weight is considerable. These deviations are almost entirely accounted for by differences in shell geometry between large and small species, the former having higher rates of whorl expansion and smaller or non–existent umbilicuses. The range of loading (weight per unit mouth area) on resting adult snails is thus much less than would be expected. It is suggested that large species are limited in the range of possible shell geometries by the need to minimize loading, while in small species other forces such as desiccation and predation may also be important: the range of geometries is generally larger. Observations on ecology and behaviour tend to support these conclusions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the two-year period, 1972–73, 6445 Ichneumonidae of 455 species were caught in a Malaise trap operated in a suburban garden in Leicester, England, the collection includes a number of species new to the British list.
Abstract: In the two-year period, 1972–73, 6445 Ichneumonidae of 455 species were caught in a Malaise trap operated in a suburban garden in Leicester, England. An additional 74 species were trapped in 1974. The collection includes a number of species new to the British list. The flight season of ichneumonids extended from March to November or December, with peak abundance and diversity in August. Size of trap samples fluctuated erratically, depending on air temperature. No species was particularly common and many were rare, 141 being taken once only in the two-year period. The commoner species were present throughout the season, supporting the suggestion that ichneumonids are niche-specific rather than host-specific. Parasites of aphidophagous Neuroptera and Syrphidae, of spiders, of micro-Lepidoptera, and of Diptera found in decaying plant material were especially abundant, as is characteristic of the British fauna as a whole. Adult ichneumonids are mobile, and it is assumed that the Malaise trap was sampling an area far larger than the garden in which it was sited, although suburban gardens are a particularly favourable habitat for ichneumonids. Twenty-two species of Serphidae were captured in the Malaise trap during 1972–74, five of them new to Britain.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Microdistribution and habitat selection were investigated in a population of Drosophila subobscura near Leeds, Yorkshire, finding that flies were much more frequent, judged by their attendance at baited traps, in the dry/dark habitat.
Abstract: Microdistribution and habitat selection were investigated in a population of Drosophila subobscura near Leeds, Yorkshire. Microdistribution was examined along a transect running through a deciduous woodland. Two main types of habitat were recognized, those with dry soil and a closed canopy of mature trees (dry and dark) and those with wet soil and an open canopy of mature trees (wet and light). Flies were much more frequent, judged by their attendance at baited traps, in the dry/dark habitat. Flies taken from both habitat types, marked with different coloured fluorescent dust and released at a point mid-way between the original habitats, tended to return to their area of initial capture.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that a direct influence of density on shell size, possibly mediated by mucus conditioning of the environment is the most probable mechanism.
Abstract: Populations ol three species of land snail, Helicella itala. Candidula intersecta and Cochlicella acuta are studied on sand dunes on Coll in the Inner Hebrides. Population density and mean shell size were estimated on 18 sample sites. The sites were ranked for six environmental factors. Environmental factors which are related to the dune vegetational succession account for much of the variation in the densities of C. intersecta and C. acuta. The density of H. itala, however, shows no strong association with these factors. Both snail density and shell size are reactively independent of total soil calcium levels. For each of the three species, mean shell size is negatively associated with population density; the environmental factors account for little of the variation in shell size. Four possible mechanisms are suggested to account for the variation of shell size with density. It is argued that a direct influence of density on shell size, possibly mediated by mucus conditioning of the environment is the most probable mechanism. There is some evidence to suggest an inter-specific effect whereby C. intersecta density affects H. itala shell size.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Distinctive differences among the materials studied suggest the retention of O. rufipogon, O. nivara and O. sativa as three distinct species.
Abstract: In order to clarify the taxonomy and the interrelationships among Asiatic cultivated rice, Oryza sativa, and its related wild species (O rufipogon, O nivara and O barthii), 41 morphological characters were examined Numerical taxonomic methods were used to analyse the data and to illustrate species relationships Distinctive differences among the materials studied suggest the retention of O rufipogoon, O nivara and O sativa as three distinct species The origin of O sativa from O nivara through domestication is discussed An annual wild taxon from Australia, which had been classified as a form of O nivara, is shown to be distinct from typical O nivnra and is raised to specific rank This species has been named O meridionalis Ng

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: All three populations of dandelions were stable during the observational period, but differed greatly in the parameters that combined to give this stability, and the chance of a seed producing seedling in the uplands was greater than in the lowlands.
Abstract: A description is given of some of the demographic parameters for three populations of dandelions, one in an upland grassland (300 m) two in a lowland roadside verge (1 m). These latter populations differed in the density of dandelions found per square metre. All three populations were stable during the observational period, but differed greatly in the parameters that combined to give this stability. The chance of a seed producing seedling in the uplands was greater (x 23) than in the lowlands. The fecundity of plants in the lowland site was between 50 and 100 times greater than that in the uplands. Seed production in the lowlands was dominated by a few large plants. This was not the case in the uplands. The population turnover time was longest in the lowland high density site (20.5 years) and shortest in the upland site (15 years).


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The semantics of the problem of individuality are examined and the difficulty of reconciling individuality with levels of organization is emphasized and the use of the term modular to denote repeated, physiologically connected sub-units is avoided.
Abstract: The semantics of the problem of individuality are examined and the difficulty of reconciling individuality with levels of organization is emphasized. Clear distinctions between various types of phenotypic, morphological expression are difficult to make and the attempt is of decreasing explanatory value. It can be avoided, in part at least, by the use of the term modular to denote repeated, physiologically connected sub-units.