Abstract

Abstract This paper reviews the importance of constraint assumptions to the predictions of static optimality models of insect clutch size. This allows us to identify predictions that distinguish between models embodying different constraints on female oviposition behaviour and hence to determine which resources or other factors limit clutch size evolutionarily. We conclude that while some models may be distinguished using qualitative criteria, others require the testing of quantitative predictions. In a companion paper (Wilson 1994) these models are tested using the bruchid beetle Callosobruchus maculatus.

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