Abstract

AbstractDensity‐dependent mortality has been considered a symptom of intraspecific competition. We examined the occurrence of such mortality in the early stages of gall induction by the gall midge Asphondylia aucubae Yukawa et Ohsaki (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae). Female midges deposit eggs into young fruit of the dioecious shrub Aucuba japonica Thunberg to induce gall formation. Each host fruit received 0–67 eggs (mean 18.5 eggs) from multiple females, whereas established galls each contained one to ten larvae. Midges suffered intense mortality (65–90%) at the egg stage. Egg mortality occurred even in fruit in which no larvae had hatched, suggesting that this mortality cannot be wholly attributed to larval interference. Egg mortality was affected by fruit size, i.e., resource capacity. Midges distributed more eggs in larger fruit. Egg mortality increased as the per‐fruit density increased relative to fruit size. In contrast, the mortality of hatchlings was density‐independent. Our results suggest that A. aucubae intensely compete for gall‐induction substrates, which are spatiotemporally rare resources.

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