Humans and their Environments
Animals and their biotic environment: Rothschildia moths.
Lecture 2529 Nov 2022
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PDF Files related to this lecture:
Janzen,1984Rothschildia.pdf
BernaysJanzenEat1988.pdf
JanzenBassus1998.pdf
a big moth
adult Rothschildia lebeau
eggs
egg hatching
3rd and 4th instars
4th instar
5th instar
other models
cocoon
Rothschildia colony
mating in captivity
mating can
male antennae
male Rothschildia trap
the next morning
male Rothschildia
marking moths
near miss
exhaustion
mating phenology
staying in copula
polymorphism
a beginning
cocoon environment
cocoon environment
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors?
why the two colors
why two colors?
phenology of wing color
phenology of wing color
phenology of wing color
female phenology
saturniid seasonal morphs
food, what you do with it
defoliation and starvation
eggs and 1rst instar larvae
first instar larvae
defoliation and starvation
starvation
results of starvation
results of starvation
mating compatibility
mating compatibility
mating compatibility
parasitoids, parasites
Enicospilus cocoons
Enicospilus lebophagus
hyperparasites
Epiencyrtus
Rothschildia erycina
R. erycina caterpillar
R. erycina cocoon
R. erycina adult
shared parasitoids
Lespesia X R. erycina
predators
predators and cocoons
predators and cocoons
insect predators
parasites