Parental effects on the behaviour and colouration of nymphs of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria
References (26)
The influence of some environmental factors on learning and aggregation in locust hoppers
Anim. Behav.
(1963)Changes in the social aggregation of locust hoppers with changes in rearing conditions
Anim. Behav.
(1963)Changes in the social behaviour of the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria, in response to the gregarizing pheromone
Anim. Behav.
(1975)- et al.
Phase polymorphism in Schistocerca gregaria: Reproductive parameters
J. Insect Physiol.
(1981) Locust phase polymorphism and its endocrine relations
Adv. Insect Physiol.
(1991)- et al.
Maternal control of ovariole number in the progeny of the migratory locust
Nature
(1959) Pheromones and chemical ecology of locusts
Biol. Rev. Camb. Phil. Soc.
(1991)- et al.
The endocrine basis of locust phase polymorphism
Marching in locust hoppers of the solitary phase
Nature
(1950)The marching behaviour of hoppers of the African migratory locust (Locusta migratoria migratorioides R. & F.) in the laboratory
Anti-Locust Bull.
(1951)
Social aggregation and gregarious behaviour in hoppers of Locusta migratoria migratorioides (R. & F.)
Behaviour
Learning and social aggregation in locust hoppers
Anim. Behav.
Some factors influencing phase characters in the nymphs of the locust, Locusta migratoria migratorioides (R. & F.)
Insect. Soc.
Cited by (91)
Modelling foraging competition between solitarious and gregarious organisms in increasingly heterogeneous environments
2022, Journal of Insect PhysiologyA journey towards an integrated understanding of behavioural phase change in locusts
2022, Journal of Insect PhysiologyCitation Excerpt :In other words, the mother had a memory of how recently she had been crowded and was, in effect, predicting the probability that her offspring would enter a crowded world and predisposing their behaviour accordingly at the time of laying her eggs (Bouaïchi et al., 1995). Meanwhile, Saiful Islam subjected male and female solitarious adults to crowding for the period between mating and oviposition and found that this resulted in gregariously behaving offspring, meaning that there was a transgenerational paternal influence as well as a maternal effect (Islam et al., 1994a). Saiful went on to parse the effect of crowding during mating and at the time of oviposition and found that hatchling behaviour could be modified by crowding solitarious mothers even as late as at the time of egg laying.
Epigenetics and developmental plasticity in orthopteroid insects
2018, Current Opinion in Insect SciencePaternal Epigenetic Inheritance
2014, Transgenerational Epigenetics