1. The relative abundance of the blowflies Calliphora vicina (R.‐D.) and Lucilia sericata (Meigen) in carrion was considered in relation to inter‐ and intraspecific larval competition and the distribution of adults between habitat types. 2. In mixed and pure laboratory cultures of L. sericata and C. vicina the mortality of both species increased and adult size declined as the initial larval number was increased. However, for L. sericata at initial numbers greater than ten larvae/g of liver, the effects of competition on adult size and mortality were greater in the mixed cultures than in the pure cultures. In contrast, for C. vicina at numbers greater than ten larvae/g of liver, the effects of competition on adult size and mortality were greater in the pure cultures than in the mixed cultures. 3. The laboratory data suggest therefore that for L. sericata the effects of interspecific competition with C. vicina on size and mortality were greater than the effects of intraspecific competition in a pure culture at the same initial number. Notably, however, the intensity of interspecific competition was not sufficiently asymmetric to allow C. vicina to exclude L. sericata even at the highest numbers examined. 4. In the field, higher numbers of adult L. sericata emerged from the carcasses of laboratory mice placed in open pasture than in woodland or hedgerow sites. In contrast, higher numbers of C. vicina emerged from carcasses placed in woodland and hedgerow sites. 5. Trapping showed that in the field adult L. sericata were relatively more abundant in open pasture than in woodland and hedgerow sites, while C. vicina were more abundant in woodland and hedgerow sites than in open pasture. 6. It is concluded that the low numbers of L. sericata that emerge from carrion relative to the numbers of C. vicina may, in part, be the result of asymmetric interspecific competition, but that the uneven distribution of adults of the two species among habitat types also plays a major role in shaping the blowfly community in carrion.
To examine the species composition of flies breeding in carrion in the field, the carcasses of mice and quail were exposed on sheep farms in the South West of England. Calliphora vicina was the dominant species of Diptera; 19,294 individuals emerged from 175 of the 241 infested carcasses recovered. Lucilia sericata emerged from only 39 of the infested carcasses, at a median of 10 adults per infested carcass. Other species of Lucilia present were L.ampullacea, L.caesar and L.illustris. The highest number of L.sericata emerged from carcasses placed in open pasture, the highest numbers of C.vicina emerged from carcasses in hedgerow, whereas the highest numbers of L.caesar, L.ampullacea and L.illustris emerged from carcasses in woodland. The duration of exposure of carcasses in the field was negatively related to the size of the adult L.sericata which emerged and, in woodland and hedgerow habitats, to the number of L.sericata which emerged. These data indicate that the larvae of L.sericata in carcasses experience significant levels of competition and that the intensity of this competition may be sufficient to reduce the numbers of L.sericata able to emerge successfully. The size distributions of female L.sericata which emerged from carcasses or which were caught as adults in the field showed only a small degree of overlap, suggesting that only a relatively small proportion of the wild L.sericata population emerge from carcass breeding sites. The results are discussed in relation to the development of new approaches to the control of blowfly strike of sheep.
1. The ages of 877 females of the blow¯y Lucilia sericata, collected from two farms in south-west England between May and September 1996, were determined using a combination of ovarian dissection and wing fray analysis.2. Using survivorship analysis, the mortality rates over the entire ®eld season were estimated to be 2.2 and 1.9% per day-degree at the two farms, respectively. These gave a mean life expectancy of 46 and 53 day-degrees, and a lifetime reproductive output of 130 and 172 eggs per female.3. The mortality rate remained relatively constant over time, with one exception, the ®rst sample of the season when no older¯ies were present, indicating that underlying changes in demography (emergence and senescence of generations) over the ®eld season were not suf®cient to affect the rates calculated by survivorship analysis.4. The response of L. sericata to liver-baited traps was affected strongly by age and reproductive status, with gravid females and females in the early stages of ovarian development being most markedly over-represented relative to other age categories.
Detailed life-cycle stage descriptions for the ectoparasitic mite Psoroptes ovis (Hering) (Acari: Psoroptidae) from rabbit hosts (syn. Psoroptes cuniculi) are presented. The results resolve a number of contradictions in the literature relating to the recognition of the life cycle stages of these mites. This study supports the view that there are two distinct male nymphal stages, both lacking dorsoposterior tubercles. The male tritonymph is significantly larger than the protonymph and has five pairs of metapodosomal setae rather than three. In addition, male tritonymphs have two pairs of cuticular pits on the central metapodosoma rather than the single pair of the protonymph. The results also show that the female protonymph can be distinguished from the male nymphal stages and the female tritonymph. Both female nymphal stages possess dorsoposterior tubercles, but the protonymph is significantly smaller than the tritonymph. In addition, the protonymph possesses three pairs of metapodosomal setae rather than five, one pair of cuticular pits rather than two, and a pulvillus on leg IV which is absent in the female tritonymph. The presence of dorsoposterior tubercles enables the female nymphs to be distinguished easily from the males. By contrast, distinguishing between the nymphal stages of the same sex relies on the identification of both the number of metapodosomal setae and cuticular pits. These descriptions are used to produce a key, which allows the various stages of both sexes to be distinguished.
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