1. Population Ecology of the Common Species of Drosophila in Indiana1
- Author
-
Edward C. Mccoy
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,fungi ,Population ,Introduced species ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Population ecology ,Fecundity ,biology.organism_classification ,Deciduous ,Habitat ,Common species ,Insect Science ,education ,Drosophila - Abstract
Drosophila affinis Sturtevant, D. quinaria Loew, D. putrida Sturt., D. robusta Sturt., D. tripunctata Loew, and D. immigrans Sturt. are the six native species most commonly encountered in north central Indiana, while D. melanogaster Meigen, D. hydei Sturt., and D. busckii Coquillett are introduced species which frequently attain large summer populations. Summer populations of the native species originate in deciduous woodlands, and during periods of population maxima in June the more prevalent species are widely dispersed through all of the major types of terrestrial habitats. Summer populations of the introduced species originate in proximity to human settlements and likewise disperse through a variety of habitats during periods of population increase, occurring with the native species in diverse situations in July but not achieving peak numbers until August. The species which infest tomatoes are widely, if thinly, dispersed at the time the crop ripens, and there is little expectation that preseason control efforts would be practicable. Despite disparate climatic conditions during the summers of 1958 and 1959, population developments in tomato fields were strikingly similar, thus indicating little correlation between normal weather extremes and population development. D. melanogaster is recognized as the principal species causing contamination of tomato products. Experimental evidence on comparative fecundity, developmental rates, and ovipositional behavior were obtained to explain the consistent prevalence of this species. Studies of diurnal activity and spatial distribution suggest that these facets of behavior are controlled principally by responses to atmospheric moisture. Adult flies were found to inhabit a space, only a few inches in height, directly above the soil surface. The micro environment provided by the foliage and fruit of the tomato plant does not require the insects to follow the pattern of peak activity at dawn and dusk often ascribed to Drosophila .
- Published
- 1962
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