Differences in weight, nitrogen content and diaminopimelic acid (DAPA) content between individual pellets within pellet groups were assessed in red-deer (Cervus elaphus) faeces. Mean pellet weight in winter varied between pellet groups in 82% of cases. A 10 pellet subsample movided a 100% likelihood of getting a representative sample whereas 5 pellet subsample a 99.75% likelihood. Between pellet variations in nitrogen content, within a pellet group were smaller and not greater than experimental error. However, DAPA content varied greatly within pellet groups.
The effects of oviposition-deterring larval tracks of four aphidophagous coccinellids and two chrysopids were investigated on females of four coccinellid species in choice tests. Aphidophagous coccinellids Cycloneda limbifer Casey, Semiadalia undecimnotata (Schneider) and Coccinella septempunctata L. laid significantly fewer eggs on sites with tracks of unfed conspecific first instar larvae than on clean sites, but Leis dimidiata (F.) laid similar numbers of eggs on both sites.
In some but not all species, tracks of heterospecific predators also deterred coccinellid females. Interspecific effects were stronger between some allopatric species than between the sympatric coccinellids C. septempunctata and S. undecimnotata. C. limbifer laid relatively few eggs on sites previously exposed to larvae of S. undecimnotata and L. dimidiata. S. undecimnotata avoided sites with tracks of L. dimidiata larvae. The two smaller species, C. limbifer and S. undecimnotata, laid considerably fewer eggs per batch than the larger coccinellids, C. septempunctata and L. dimidiata. C. limbifer and S. undecimnotata oviposited similar numbers of eggs on clean sites and sites with tracks of chrysopid larvae of the species Chrysopa oculata and Chrysopa perla. Females of C. septempunctata laid fewer eggs on sites previously exposed to larvae of C. oculata but not C. perla.
Densities of faecal spots of coccinellid females on clean substrates and substrates with tracks of predatory larvae differed significantly in only one choice test (C. limbifer females exposed to tracks of S. undecimnotata larvae). This indicates that the presence of larval tracks affects where females lay eggs more than where they search.