Episyrphus balteatus only matures eggs after emergence. Ovaries develop in 4 stages. In the absence of oviposition sites, females refrain from ovipositing and their ovaries progressively fill the abdomen and then egg resorption occurs. The potential fecundity, which is expressed by the ovariole number, the reproductive biomass and the abdomen volume, scales isometrically with the size of females. Egg size is much less variable and does not rise proportionally to body size. In laboratory conditions, females of E. balteatus might lay between 2,000 and 4,500 eggs during their life-time at a rate of 1 to 2 eggs per ovariole per day. Both life-time fecundity and rate of egg production are directly related to the size of females. The potential and realized fecundities are likely to be limited by the availability of food resources during larval and adult life, respectively.
The 'Debrecen Photoheliographlc Results’ beginnlng with the year 1977 gives various kinds of posltion and area data of sunspots dally for a single moment, includlng all spot groups vlsible at least
on two days.In addition, thls catalogue also indicates tlie magnetlc spot polarities and for each sunspot, wherever reasonable, a special number as a mark of Identification. By these means special features of the spot activity of 1977 have been studied. So, diverse spot distributions and the principal spot motions within the groups, as well as the local solar rotatlon in several regions of spot groups by means of tracers of spot positions have been determlned. The most important characteristlcs found are presented.
AIM: The purpose of this study was to develop a revised version of the Brief Bedside Dysphagia Screening Test for determining penetration/aspiration risk in patients prone to dysphagia. The priority was to achieve high sensitivity and negative predictive value. METHODS: The study screeners conducted bedside assessment of the swallowing function in 157 patients with a neurological (mainly stroke) or an ear, nose, and throat diagnosis (mainly head and neck cancer). The results were compared with a gold standard, flexible endoscopic examination of swallowing. RESULTS: For the neurological subgroup (N = 106), eight statistically significant bedside assessment items were combined into the Brief Bedside Dysphagia Screening Test-Revised (BBDST-R). Cut-off score 1 produced the highest sensitivity (95.5%; 95% confidence interval CI [CI]: 84.9-98.7%) and negative predictive value (88.9%; 95% CI 67.2-96.9%). CONCLUSION: The BBDST-R is suitable for dysphagia screening in departments caring for patients with neurological conditions. and P. Mandysová, E. Ehler, J. Škvrňáková, M. Černý, I. Bártová, A. Pellant
The present scanning electron microscopy study describes the development of Lecanicillium muscarium, strain DAOM 198499, on the surface of diverse hosts, including Sphaerotheca fuliginea, a fungal host, and Macrosiphum euphorbiae and Aphidius nigripes, insect hosts. The hosts were sprayed with a conidial suspension of L. muscarium (107 conidia/ml). The specimens used in the SEM investigation were collected at particular periods after spraying and prepared for scanning using standard methods. Germination tubes developed twenty-four hours after applying L. muscarium conidia to each host. Hyphae were attached to the host by a thin mucilaginous matrix. Seventy-two hours after spraying, hyphae of S. fuliginea had collapsed and were encircled by the parasite, and primary sporulation of L. muscarium was observed. On the aphid host, colonization started with adherence of the conidia to the host cuticle, followed by conidial germination and growth of mycelium on the surface of the insect's integument. After 48 to 72 h, post colonization, the first sporulation was observed on the cuticle, particularly at articulations. The mode of parasitism of A. nigripes by this fungus was similar to that of the aphid. Development of L. muscarium was observed on both mummified aphids (containing the pupae of parasitoids) and adult parasitoids.
The modern Serbian state (the Principality/Kingdom of Serbia) was created and its territory enlarged gradually during the 19th and early 20th century, in a process of emancipation from the Ottoman Empire, where specific agrarian relations existed based on Ottoman feudalism. Consequently the development of the modern Serbian state proceeded parallel to the replacement of Ottoman agrarian relations with a new type of land ownership, with formerly dependent peasants becoming private owners of the land that they had farmed under Ottoman rule. This led to deep-rooted social changes and even changes in the national culture. For this purpose the paper presents an overview of the creation and the territorial expansion of the modern Serbian state, in the context of the change in the international position of the Ottoman Empire and its social structure. A thorough analysis of the Ottoman agrarian relations in the Balkan regions of the Ottoman Empire is carried out, specifying the changes that occurred during the armed springs of the Serbian peasants - the First and Second Serbian Uprising (1804-1813, 1815). The process of abolishing Ottoman agrarian relations (with the constitution of private land ownership) is treated in detail in the territory of the Principality of Serbia, following the attainment of formal autonomy within the Ottoman Empire (1830) and after gaining independence (1878), including all the international implications.
On the basis of the refitting of chipped stone industry it has been possible to reconstruct and compare the reduction strategies of three prominent cultural complexes in Moravia during the Early Upper Palaeolithic. Thanks to such refitting, it is possible to describe the basic technological differences between the Bohunician, the Szeletian and the Aurignacian. and Na základě skládanek kamenné štípané industrie se podařilo zrekonstruovat a porovnat operační schéma tří význačných kulturních komplexů na Moravě na počátku mladého paleolitu. Díky těmto remontážím jsme schopni popsat základní technologické rozdíly mezi bohunicienem, szeletienem a aurignacienem.
The development of the solitary endoparasitic braconid Glyptapanteles porthetriae in gypsy moth larvae of different ages was studied. Host larvae were parasitized during the premolt to the 2nd instar (A-larvae), to the 3rd instar (B-larvae) or to the 4th instar (C-larvae), respectively. The percentage of successfully parasitized larvae decreased markedly with the age of the host at the time of parasitization. When parasitization occurred at the premolt to the second or third instar, parasitoid larvae successfully emerged at rates of 68% and 57%, respectively, in contrast to the 17% from larvae parasitized in the premolt to the fourth instar. In all three groups of parasitized larvae the final host instar was significantly longer than the corresponding instar of unparasitized control larvae of the same age. However, the growth and growth rate of parasitized larvae were reduced compared to control larvae. Due to the extremely low rate of successful development of G. porthetriae in C-larvae, parameters of parasitoid development were only recorded in A and B-host larvae. In both the parasitoid growth was slow during the first instar but rapidly increased during the second instar. Total developmental time of the parasitoid was significantly longer in B-host larvae, and the resultant cocoons were heavier than those that developed in A-host larvae, but proportionally fewer of the offspring were females. Within both groups the female wasps took significantly longer to develop than the males.
A radiochemical assay (RCA) has been used for the measurement of juvenile hormone (JH) synthesis in vitro by corpora allata (CA) from the Eri silkworm, Samia cynthia ricini. Using CA from newly emerged female adults for the bioassay, the most suitable incubation conditions were determined. A high rate of JH synthesis was found in medium TC199 at pH 6.5, 30°C and 4 mM Ca2+. The time course of JH synthesis showed a steady decrease during the first 6 hours of incubation.
Under optimal incubation conditions, CA from the 4th and 5th larval instars, pupae and adults were used for measuring JH synthesis in vitro. The highest rates of JH synthesis were found on the 1st day of both larval stages, and then JH synthesis decreased steadily during the following two days of each instar. From the 4th day of the 5th larval instar to the 2nd day after pupation, CA could still synthesize small amounts of JH. However, from the 3rd day of the pupal stage to 12 hours before adult emergence, no JH release was observed. About 6 hours before emergence, CA of both female and male pharate adults regained the ability to synthesize JH. JH synthesis increased to a maximum shortly after emergence and then decreased again during the following two days. During this period, JH synthesis in vitro by CA from females was always higher than that of males. This is the first report on JH synthesis in vitro by CA from both female and male pharate adults and adults of a lepidopteran species, where the adults do not feed, are relatively short-lived, mate only once, and ovarian maturation and vitellogenesis are completed before emergence.
Lepeophtheirus simplex Ho, Gómez et Fajer-Avila, 2001 is a parasite of Sphoeroides annulatus (Jenyns), an economically important fish species, with potential for aquaculture, in northwestern Mexico. The goal of this study was to describe the developmental stages under experimental conditions and seasonal fecundity of this parasite on wild fish. There are two naupliar, one copepodid, two chalimus and two pre-adult stages preceding the adult of L. simplex. The results support previous findings, which point out that the life cycle of the caligid copepods includes only six post-naupliar stages. The generation time from egg extrusion to adult for L. simplex was approximately 10 days at 22 °C. The body length of the ovigerous females ranged between 2.2 and 4.1 mm, and its fecundity between 12 and 36 eggs per string. Fecundity was negatively correlated with the egg size and positively correlated with the egg string length. Our data did not reveal significant differences in fecundity among sampling months, but ovigerous females were significantly larger in March (when water temperature was 22 °C) than in June and July (when water temperature was 30 °C). To some extent, our fecundity results contrast with those found in species of sea lice from higher latitudes. Undoubtedly, biological information on different species of sea lice from different environmental conditions will enhance our understanding of their infection strategies and will be valuable, given the increasing interest in marine fish farming in Mexico., Francisco Neptalí Morales-Serna, Ana Inés Rivas-Salas, Samuel Gómez, Emma Josefina Fajer-Ávila., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Body size is one of the most investigated traits in studies of sexual selection in fruit flies of the genus Drosophila. In D. melanogaster, size has often been correlated with male mating success, i.e. larger males were more successful in achieving copulations both in laboratory and field conditions. In the present paper, we investigated if male body size is a sexually selected trait in competitive conditions, when full-sibs that developed at two different temperatures (18 and 25°C) competed for females. Males developed at a lower temperature were significantly larger than those reared at a higher temperature, but they were not more successful in mating. We conclude that when body size is significantly induced by temperature variability, it is not correlated with male mating success., Sofija Pavkovic-Lučic, Vladimir Kekic., and Obsahuje seznam literatury