| Literature DB >> 19319251 |
Abstract
The ratio of male to female Reesimermis nielseni Tsai and Grundmann, a nematode parasite of mosquito larvae, increased as the number of parasites per host increased. Hosts with a single nematode produced 9% males compared with essentially 100% males in hosts with more than 7 parasites; hosts with 3 nematodes produced about equal numbers of males and females. Males of R. nielseni generally emerged before females because of the earlier death of multiple-infected mosquitoes. The species of the host mosquito influenced the sex ratio, but the size of a specific host at the time of invasion did not. Host diet also had a noticeable influence on the sex ratio of the nematode: singly infected hosts from a starved population produced 92% males compared with 13% in the normally fed group. The importance of these factors in the mass rearing of R. nielseni is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Mermithidae; Reesimermis nielseni; Rornanomermis; biological control; mosquitoes; parasitism; sex ratios
Year: 1972 PMID: 19319251 PMCID: PMC2619928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nematol ISSN: 0022-300X Impact factor: 1.402