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Journal ArticleDOI

All-female broods in Hypolimnas bolina (L.): A re-survey of West Fiji after 60 years

TLDR
No entirely satisfactory explanation has yet been given for the persistence of all-female broods in the Xymphalid butterfly Hypolimnas bolina, and the status of H, bolina as a mimic of species of Euploea is less assured as the result of the survey.
Abstract
In the Xymphalid butterfly Hypolimnas bolina (L.) H. W. Simmonds in 1921 demonstrated, by breeding experiments, the occurrence on the islands of West Fiji of all-female broods, and he compared their frequency with that of normal bisexual broods in the same localities. In two areas he found only unisexual families (14 of them in Suva and one on Vanua Levuj, in one island (Ovalau) only a single bisexual brood and in the other two islands, Taveuni and Kandavu, one bisexual and one of each type respectively. Nearly 60 years, and probably at least 150 generations later, we found that all-female broods were still present in four of the five islands re-investigated, and breeding showed that in these four (which included Suva) the proportion of the two types of female was approximately equal. In the fifth island only a bisexual family was bred. The only marked change between 1921 and 1980 was in the Suva area, where Simmonds found far more unisexual females than we did. By carrying out spermatophore counts in many of our wild females we found that almost all of them had been mated, the majority of them on one occasion only. Though the data are scanty, they suggest that there is no wastage of females and that the population in 1980 was stable for the two types of brood. Reasons for our findings are discussed, particularly in the light of the Heuch model, but we conclude that no entirely satisfactory explanation has yet been given for the persistence of all-female broods. Again, there is so far no explanation of the mechanism though we favour a cytoplasmic factor. We feel that the status of H, bolina as a mimic of species of Euploea is less assured as the result of our survey.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Incidences and Evolution of Cytoplasmic Male Killers

TL;DR: Two types of male-killing cytoplasmic gene are distinguished by their time of action, and it is argued that to maximize the efficiency of horizontal transmission it is in the interests of the microsporidians to maximize their number by waiting for the host to grow before killing it.
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The incidences. mechanisms and evolution of cytoplasmic sex ratio distorters in animals

TL;DR: The criteria for establishing the existence of cytoplasmic sex ratio distorters is defined and the nature of the causative agent is explained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why do maternally inherited microorganisms kill males

TL;DR: It is concluded that male killing appears to be an adaptive strategy for the microorganism in most cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wolbachia infection associated with all-female broods in Hypolimnas bolina (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae): evidence for horizontal transmission of a butterfly male killer

TL;DR: Investigation of the male killing trait in the butterfly Hypolimnas bolina revealed the causal agent of sex ratio distortion in H. bolina to be a male killing Wolbachia bacterium, suggesting it has moved between host species, yet retained its phenotype.
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High-prevalence male-killing Wolbachia in the butterfly Acraea encedana

TL;DR: This bacterium discovered in the butterfly Acraea encedana belongs to the genus Wolbachia and is identical in wsp gene sequence to a male‐killer in the closely related butterfly A. encedon, suggesting that it has either recently moved between host species or was inherited from a common ancestor of the butterflies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotypic diversity, mimicry and natural selection in the African butterfly Hypolimnas misippus L. (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae)

TL;DR: Hypolimnas misippus, a sexually dimorphic, nymphalid butterfly with a very variable female, was sampled for 41 consecutive months, along with its supposed model, Danaus chrysippus (Danaidae), at Dar es Salaam, Tanzania to conclude that mimetic resemblance is not of over-riding importance to its maintenance and perpetuation.
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The genetics of the mimetic butterfly Hypolimnas bolina (L.)

TL;DR: A Nymphalid butterfly having a west to east distribution from Madagascar to Easter Island, and a north to south one from Japan to Australasia, the female is both monomorphic and a mimic of Euploea.
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All-female broods in the butterfly Hypolimnas bolina (L.)

TL;DR: Evidence is obtained that the deficiency of males in the butterfly H. bolina is due to their very high mortality in the pre-adult stage and that their numbers are maintained by contagion from an unidentified reservoir species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maintenance of butterfly populations with all-female broods under recurrent extinction and recolonization.

TL;DR: It is shown that a stable equilibrium can exist in a simple model leading to a set of differential equations and also in a more realistic simulation model, which may have a bearing on certain prey-predator systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypolimnas bolina(L.), a mimic of danaid butterflies, and its model Euploea core (Cram.) store cardioactive substances.

TL;DR: Dried specimens of this butterfly, reared on Asystasia gangetica, a plant which does not contain these substances, evoke no reaction on isolated rat heart, but living specimens produce a slight response, which indicates that in addition to material sequestered from foodplants, the butterfly itself secretes some type of cardioactive substance.
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