2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.05.16.492197
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Protective geometry and reproductive anatomy as candidate determinants of clutch size variation in pentatomid bugs

Abstract: Many animals lay their eggs in clusters. Eggs on the periphery of clusters can be at higher risk of mortality. We asked whether the most commonly occurring clutch sizes in pentatomid bugs could result from geometrical arrangements that maximize the proportion of eggs in the cluster's interior. Although the most common clutch sizes do not correspond with geometric optimality, stink bugs do tend to lay clusters of eggs in shapes that protect increasing proportions of their offspring as clutch sizes increase. We … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…For the other three host species tested, which had type O susceptibility curves, calculating mean survival over the full range of egg mass sizes tested resulted in more modest increases in predicted refuge sizes (Figure 5) as survival was often higher (albeit not significantly so) at lower and/or greater egg mass sizes (Figure 3). Our results provide some evidence, albeit relatively weak, that clutch size-dependent parasitism risk could, in principle, be among several biotic factors influencing clutch size evolution of some stink bug species (Abram et al, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…For the other three host species tested, which had type O susceptibility curves, calculating mean survival over the full range of egg mass sizes tested resulted in more modest increases in predicted refuge sizes (Figure 5) as survival was often higher (albeit not significantly so) at lower and/or greater egg mass sizes (Figure 3). Our results provide some evidence, albeit relatively weak, that clutch size-dependent parasitism risk could, in principle, be among several biotic factors influencing clutch size evolution of some stink bug species (Abram et al, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…We found mixed evidence for our original predictions that smaller and larger egg masses would have higher survival when exposed to T. japonicus . Smaller egg masses were rejected more often by T. japonicus only for two of the four host species, P. maculiventris and C. ligata , potentially because they were perceived by parasitoids to be of lower quality (i.e., would yield less offspring) than egg masses of their most closely associated host, H. halys , which usually lays 28 eggs (Abram et al, 2022). However, it is not clear why this trend was only observed for these two non‐target host species and not on H. halys or E. conspersus .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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