Abstract

ABSTRACT. 1. Egg sizes and clutch sizes of the grasshoppers Chorthippus brunneus (Thunb.) and Myrmeleotettix maculatus (Thunb.) were compared among three years and among three sites less than 1.3 km apart. Relationships between these reproductive traits and date of egg laying, body size and body condition were sought.2. M.maculatus, the smaller species, laid fewer but larger eggs; and only the eggs of this species showed significant differences between sites and years.3. A negative correlation between egg size and number per clutch was evident between species and years, but generally not among sites and among individuals of a population.4. However, a hidden negative correlation between egg size and number was uncovered within populations when the relationship was examined for females of a given mature weight.5. Variation in the number of eggs per clutch was explained statistically by a positive relationship between female body weight and egg number. Also, both interpopulation and intrapopulation comparisons revealed that for M.maculatus, but not for C.brunneus, females with long hind femurs laid large eggs.

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