Online Book Reader

Home Category

Sex on Six Legs_ Lessons on Life, Love, and Language From the Insect World - Marlene Zuk [109]

By Root 289 0
analysis. Behavior Genetics 21: 547–558.

Switzer, P. V., P. S. Forsythe, K. Escajeda, and K. C. Kruse. 2004. Effects of environmental and social conditions on homosexual pairing in the Japanese Beetle (Popillia japonica Newman). Journal of Insect Behavior 17: 1–16.

Tennent, W. J. 1987. A note on the apparent lowering of moral standards in the Lepidoptera. Entomologists Record 99: 81–82.

Van Gossum, H., L. De Bruyn, and R. Stoks. 2005. Reversible switches between male-male and male-female mating behaviour by male damselflies. Biology Letters 1: 268–270.

Vosshall, L. B. 2008. Scent of a fly. Neuron 59: 685–689.

Wang, Q., L. Chen, J. Li, and X. Yin. 1996. Mating behavior of Phytoecia rufiventris Gautier (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Journal of Insect Behavior 9: 47–60.

7. Parenting and the Rotten Corpse

Beal, C. A., and D. W. Tallamy. 2006. A new record of amphisexual care in an insect with exclusive paternal care: Rhynocoris tristis (Heteroptera: Reduviidae). Journal of Ethology 24: 305–307.

Cocroft, R. 2002. Antipredator defense as a limited resource: Unequal predation risk in broods of an insect with maternal care. Behavioral Ecology 13: 125–133.

Costa, J. T. 2006. The Other Insect Societies. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.

Evans, T. A., E. J. Wallis, and M. A. Elgar. 1995. Making a meal of mother. Nature 376: 299.

Godfray, H.C.J. 1995. Evolutionary theory of parent-offspring conflict. Nature 376: 133–138.

———. 2005. Quick guide: Parent-offspring conflict. Current Biology 15: R191.

Goubault, M., D. Scott, and I. C. W. Hardy. 2007. The importance of offspring value: Maternal defence in parasitoid contests. Animal Behaviour 74: 437–446.

Klug, H., and M. B. Bonsall. 2007. When to care for, abandon, or eat your offspring: The evolution of parental care and filial cannibalism. American Naturalist 170: 886–901.

Kölliker, M. 2007. Benefits and costs of earwig (Forficula auricularia) family life. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 61: 1489–1497.

Mas, F., and M. Kolliker. 2008. Maternal care and offspring begging in social insects: Chemical signalling, hormonal regulation and evolution. Animal Behaviour 76: 1121–1131.

Nakahira, T., and S. Kudo. 2008. Maternal care in the burrower bug Adomerus triguttulus: Defensive behavior. Journal of Insect Behavior 21: 306–316.

Ohba, S., K. Hidaka, and M. Sasaki. 2006. Notes on paternal care and sibling cannibalism in the giant water bug, Lethocerus deyrolli (Heteroptera: Belostomatidae). Entomological Science 9: 1–5.

Perry, J. C., and B. D. Roitberg. 2005. Ladybird mothers mitigate offspring starvation risk by laying trophic eggs. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 58: 578–586.

———. 2006. Trophic egg laying: Hypotheses and tests. Oikos 112: 706–714.

Roy, H. E., H. Rudge, L. Goldrick, and D. Hawkins. 2007. Eat or be eaten: Prevalence and impact of egg cannibalism on two-spot ladybirds, Adalia bipunctata. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata 125: 33–38.

Santi, F., and S. Maini. 2007. Ladybirds mothers eating their eggs: Is it cannibalism? Bulletin of Insectology 60: 89–91.

Saul-Gershenz, L. S., and J. G. Millar. 2006. Phoretic nest parasites use sexual deception to obtain transport to their host's nest. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 103: 14039–14044.

Smiseth, P. T., and H. J. Parker. 2008. Is there a cost to larval begging in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides? Behavioral Ecology 19: 1111–1115.

Smiseth, P. T., R.J.S. Ward, and A. J. Moore. 2006. Asynchronous hatching in Nicrophorus vespilloides, an insect in which parents provide food for their offspring. Functional Ecology 20: 151–156.

Smith, G., S. T. Trumbo, D. S. Sikes, M. P. Scott, and R. L. Smith. 2007. Host shift by the burying beetle, Nicrophorus pustulatus, a parasitoid of snake eggs. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 20: 2389–2399.

Smith, R. L. 1979. Paternity assurance and altered roles in the mating behaviour of a giant water bug, Abedus herberti (Heteroptera, Belostomatidae). Animal Behaviour 27: 716–725.

Staerkle, M., and M. Kolliker. 2008. Maternal food regurgitation to nymphs

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader