Abstract

SummaryThe contagiousness in the operation of mortality processes on the colonies of the western tent caterpillar, Malacosoma californicum pluviale, was analyzed from two different aspects: successive changes in the frequency distribution of the number of surviving individuals per colony in the course of development, and the distribution pattern of the individuals killed by some biotic mortality factors. Also, for a tachinid parasite, Tachinomyia similis, the analysis was made on the egg‐laying pattern on colonies as well as on individual larvae. The methods of these analyses were all based on the relation of mean crowding (m) on mean .A braconid parasite, Rogas sp., tended to kill few individuals together once it attacked a colony, but its effect on host colonies was rather equivalent to the random removal of individuals from all the colonies. Diseases in the late‐stage larvae before cocooning was contagious in their action. Nuclear polyhedrosis virus seemed to have no basic contagiousness in its action, but it caused highly contagious distribution of deaths among the colonies when its average incidence was high. A spore‐forming Bacillus had a tendency to kill several individuals once it appeared in a colony, but the distribution of its incidence (no. of times it appeared per colony) was considered to be nearly at random.The female of Tachinomyia tended to lay more than one egg successively on the same colony. It also attacked individual larvae with a definite tendency for aggregation, which seemed to be resulted from the parasite's preference to large hosts. When the number of eggs laid on prefered hosts exceeded a certain threshold, however, the fly seemed to change its attention to less attractive, smaller individuals.

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