Abstract
The incidence of lethal parasites in the larvae of a Tipula paludosa population was monitored for two seasons. The proportions of larvae infected with Tipula iridescent virus (TIV) and a tachinid insect were similar to those in previously studied populations, whereas the proportions of larvae infected with Tipula nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) and a spore-forming bacterium (SFB) were higher. Conservative estimates of mortality due to these four agents were 10.7% in 1977–1978 and 7.7% in 1978–1979. The mean population density and the proportion of SFB-infected larvae were lower in 1978–1979 than in 1977–1978, while the proportion of NPV-infected larvae was higher. In 1979 the proportion of NPV-infected larvae was positively correlated with population density, which was highest in the wettest part of the study area. In both seasons the proportion of SFB-infected larvae was negatively correlated with population density. Larvae infected with the NPV or the SFB became pallid at an advanced stage of infection, but, although infected larvae were found throughout the larval period, pallid larvae were only found in the later part. It is suggested that larvae become infected in an early instar, then the infections slowly develop throughout the remainder of the larval period. Five larvae were found with mixed infections; four were infected with the SFB and NPV, while the fifth was infected with the SFB and TIV.
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