Abstract

In the subsocial burrower bug, Adomerus triguttulus (Motschulsky, 1886), females produce trophic eggs, which are inviable and serve as a food supply for hatched nymphs, and add them onto egg masses during maternal care. Trophic eggs are expected to be less costly for females to produce and for offspring to consume than viable eggs. Such specialization may be reflected in the size, structure, and developmental process of the eggs. Inviable trophic eggs were smaller than viable eggs, and the intraclutch size variation of the former was larger than that of the latter. The viable eggs always had approximately five micropylar processes at a pole, whereas the trophic eggs mostly lacked them. Active oogenesis was maintained during the maternal egg care period; oocyte development continued after the deposition of viable eggs and declined close to the hatching time of the clutches. Mature chorionated eggs were consistently observed in ovaries. It is strongly suggested that at least some trophic eggs contained in clutches at hatching are those that have matured and been deposited during the maternal care of eggs. We discuss possible selective factors leading to the specialization of these unusual heteropteran trophic eggs and the ecological significance of their ovarian dynamics.

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