Abstract
During the last 16 years, the numbers of Cavdiaspina albitextura rose from
low to high in many places, and either remained high or eventually resumed their
original levels. In other places, the numbers of the psyllid remained low although they
fluctuated considerably.
The results of a population study which began in 1952 suggest that, in parts of
the woodland colonized by C. albitextura, the stabilization of psyllid numbers occurred
temporarily - in some areas at low mean levels of population density and in others
at high mean levels. In other parts of the woodland, psyllid numbers changed
progressively with time.
The occurrence of numerical stabilization appeared to depend upon the
extent of the mortality caused directly or indirectly by certain environmental
agencies whose "deciding" or "conditioning" influence determined when and where
stabilization was possible. At low psyllid densities, the principal conditioning agencies
were probably the whole complex of species predacious on psyllid nymphs and eggs,
and weather. At high psyllid densities, the conditioning agencies were the density of
host trees, and wind.
Providing that sufficient mortality was caused by the conditioning agencies,
negative feed-back mechanisms were able to implement stabilization. At low psyllid
densities, birds predacious on adult psyllids appeared to be the operative or "density-governing"
agency. The intensity of their attacks, which tended to increase with
increase in psyllid density, operated in a probabilistic manner to limit increase in
population numbers. At high psyllid densities, food and space favourable for
oviposition were the operative agencies. The limited availability of food and space
brought into action a stabilizing mechanism which functioned automatically
through forms of intraspecific competition.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
71 articles.
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