Abstract

The egg complement (total number of eggs produced by a single female) differs greatly among the species of Strepsiptera. The maximum is found in Stichotrema dallatorreanum (750,000 eggs), and the minimum in Triozocera minor (984 eggs). Based on the egg complement of 31 species in 11 genera, the following conclusions were drawn: (1) The egg complement is generally smaller in those species whose hosts gregariously cohabit in a very limited area, or are distinct flower-visitors, compared with those whose hosts display the above two traits weakly; (2) The egg complement is determined by the size of the maternal body. The size of female strepsipterans is reduced when they parasitize smaller host such as males and workers, as compared with those that parasitize larger host such as females and queens; likewise, the size of the strepsipterans becomes larger on increase in size of hosts, showing that their egg complements are principally determined by the size of host species; (3) The increase in the egg complement is compensated for by the reduction in egg size. The relative egg size (length of the firstinstar larva/length of maternal body) is conspicuously reduced according to an increase in the size of the female strepsipterans.

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