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Lepidoptera genitalia

About: Lepidoptera genitalia is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10114 publications have been published within this topic receiving 78876 citations. The topic is also known as: Uncus.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present study represents the first attempt to survey genome size variation in lepidopteran genome sizes, giving estimates for more than 50 species and increasing the coverage of the order to 15 families.
Abstract: Little information is available on genome size diversity among insects, even in otherwise well-studied groups such as the Lepidoptera. In fact, only six lepidopteran species have been studied to da...

45 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Head capsule width data for all 3 species support the developmental polymorphism hypothesis and a change in nutritional quality influenced the proportions of larvae with varying numbers of instars, but did not appreciably influence the kinds of resulting instar groups within a given species.
Abstract: C. viridis Freeman, C. occidcntalis Freeman, and C. fumiferana (Clemens), exhibited 6, 7, and 8; 5, 6, and 7; and 6 and 7 larval instars, respectively, when reared on artificial diets. Males exhibited fewer instars than females. Head capsule width data for all 3 species support the developmental polymorphism hypothesis. A change in nutritional quality influenced the proportions of larvae with varying numbers of instars, but did not appreciably influence the kinds of resulting instar groups within a given species.

44 citations

Book ChapterDOI
25 Feb 2013
TL;DR: The order represents a mega-diverse radiation of almost exclusively phytophagous insects, probably correlated with the great diversification of flowering plants since the Cretaceous, and provides many vital and economically important services within terrestrial ecosystems.
Abstract: Lepidoptera are one of the four major insect orders, and one of the best studied invertebrate groups, containing over 160,000 described species and an estimated equal number of undescribed species, arranged in 124 families (Kristensen et al. 2007). Lepidoptera occupy all except the very coldest terrestrial regions, but the Neotropics and Indoaustralian region have five times more species per unit area than the Palaearctic and Nearctic, and three times more than the Afrotropical region (Heppner 1991). They are scale-winged insects, traditionally divided into three major assemblages: micro-moths, butterflies and macro-moths (Kristensen et al. 2007). The order represents a mega-diverse radiation of almost exclusively phytophagous insects, probably correlated with the great diversification of flowering plants since the Cretaceous (Menken et al. 2010). They provide many vital and economically important services within terrestrial ecosystems (e.g. nutrient recycling, soil formation, food resources and pollination). The scale of these contributions is illustrated by the estimate that blue tit (Parus caeruleus) chicks consume at least 35 billion caterpillars each year in the UK alone (Fox et al. 2006). Lepidoptera also have considerable human significance, both economic and scientific. A growing industry farms pupae for supply to butterfly houses across the world. One moth species has been domesticated in order to provide silk (i.e. Bombyx mori

44 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023819
20221,918
2021212
2020271
2019279