Abstract
The proportion of mated females (M f) of the osmund sawfly, Strongylogaster osmundae, and the sex ratio of the eggs they deposited (r, proportion of males) were estimated in the wild by collecting egg masses. The proportion of mated females at oviposition varied from 0 to 1.0. M f was high (often 1.0) among the females that emerged after hibernation, and lower in the subsequent generations. Mated females of the hibernated generation deposited equal numbers of eggs of both sexes. Mated females of the first and subsequent generations produced more female than male eggs. These results qualitatively agreed with the prediction provided by an evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) model (if M f < 1 then r < 0.5). However, the quantitative prediction provided by the model [M f (1 − r) = 0.5] was not always observed in the wild, especially where the population density and M f were high. The value of r was often lower than the predicted one. The following simple hypothesis was tested by experimentation: “Females that encounter males frequently estimate the proportion of mated females to be high and deposit eggs with a 1:1 sex ratio.” However, results did not support this hypothesis. Females that copulated soon after emergence and were courted by males two or more times did not show a higher offspring sex ratio than those which mated 1 or 2 days after emergence and experienced no other sexual encounter. Another mechanism for determination of r is suggested, and the reason why the population sex ratio of sawflies is often female-biased (r < 0.5) is discussed.
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Received: 14 December 1998 / Accepted: 01 March 1999
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Otsuka, K., Koshio, C. Proportion of mated females, female mating experience, and sex ratio of the osmund sawfly, Strongylogaster osmundae (Hymenoptera, Tenthredinidae). Oecologia 120, 44–49 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004420050831
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004420050831