Life-history theory has suggested that individual body size can strongly affect the allocation of resources to reproduction and away from other traits such as survival. In many insects, adults eclose with a proportion of their potential lifetime egg production that is already mature (the ovigeny index). We establish for the solitary parasitoid wasp Aphaereta genevensis that the ovigeny index decreases with adult body size, despite both initial egg load and potential lifetime fecundity increasing with body size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report experiments using two closely related species of alysiine braconids directed at understanding how gregarious development evolved in one subfamily of parasitoid wasps. Theoretical models predict that once siblicide between parasitoid wasps has evolved, it can only be lost under stringent conditions, making the transition from solitary to gregarious development exiguous. Phylogenetic studies indicate, however, that gregariousness has independently arisen on numerous occasions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe lethal fighting of larvae in many parasitoid species is a striking example of sibling rivalry. Theory has suggested that such fighting, and subsequent solitary development, might be irreversible, but phylogenetic evidence suggests otherwise. New empirical work now shows that the loss of mobility in parasitoid larvae, with the retention of fighting behaviour, is one way to escape the trap of solitary development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNinety-three beef bulls and 2316 females were used to determine the relationships between breeding assessments of bulls and subsequent mating performance. Each bull was given a breeding soundness examination (BSE) and two 10-min libido/serving capacity (L/SC) tests. Breeding potential of each bull was classified as satisfactory (BSE score = 60 to 100) or questionable (BSE score = 30 to 59); libido was classified as either high (mean score = 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEfficiency in reference to pregnancy rates of breeding beef bulls with estrus synchronized cows and heifers was tested. Most bulls (104 of 112) were given a breeding soundness examination and two 10-min libido/serving capacity tests. Females received either Syncro-Mate-B (SMB) or two injections of Prostaglandin F(2)alpha (PGF) to synchronize estrus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrior to use in single-sire mating trials, ninety-two beef bulls were evaluated to determine the relationships between. Breeding Soundness Examination (BSE) and sex drive assessment categories. A BSE score was given to each bull based on scrotal circumference, spermatozoal motility and morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA total of 92 range beef bulls (Hereford = 60; Angus = 32) were given a breeding soundness examination (BSE) and two assessments for sex drive prior to their use in 23 breeding trials employing estrous synchronized females. Bulls were in three age groups: yearlings (n=29), two year olds (n=36), and three year olds and older (n=27). All yearling bulls were virgins, but the majority of the older bulls had previous mating experience.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBeef bulls of approximately 15 months of age were placed with heifers at bull to female ratios (BFR) of 1:20 (n = 3) and 2:40 (n = 3) to compare the breeding efficiency of bulls used in either a single- or a multi-sire group. Prior to the breeding period, each bull was given a breeding soundness exam and two exposures to a libido/serving capacity test. For the purpose of synchronizing estrus, heifers received a nine-day Syncro-Mate-B((R)) (G.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeriodic collections of uterine venous blood were obtained from three nonmated, three pregnant and two mated but nonpregnant ewes in which uterine veins were cannulated with polyvinyl tubing on day 11 postestrus. Frequent sampling was achieved in three of these ewes with additional cannulae in the ovarian veins. Blood samples were collected at 3-hr intervals from 0600 on day 12 to 1800 on day 13 and then 6-hr intervals through day 15.
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