Humans and their Environments
Animals and their biotic environment: Rothschildia moths.
Lecture 2529 Nov 2022
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Janzen,1984Rothschildia.pdf
BernaysJanzenEat1988.pdf
JanzenBassus1998.pdf

1   a big moth

2   adult Rothschildia lebeau

3   eggs

4   egg hatching

5   3rd and 4th instars

6   4th instar

7   5th instar

8   other models

9   cocoon

10   Rothschildia colony

11   mating in captivity

12   mating can

13   male antennae

14   male Rothschildia trap

15   the next morning

16   male Rothschildia

17   marking moths

18   near miss

19   exhaustion

20   mating phenology

21   staying in copula

22   polymorphism

23   a beginning

24   cocoon environment

25   cocoon environment

26   why the two colors?

27   why the two colors?

28   why the two colors?

29   why the two colors?

30   why the two colors?

31   why the two colors?

32   why the two colors?

33   why the two colors?

34   why the two colors?

35   why the two colors?

36   why the two colors?

37   why the two colors

38   why two colors?

39   phenology of wing color

40   phenology of wing color

41   phenology of wing color

42   female phenology

43   saturniid seasonal morphs

44   food, what you do with it

45   defoliation and starvation

46   eggs and 1rst instar larvae

47   first instar larvae

48   defoliation and starvation

49   starvation

50   results of starvation

51   results of starvation

52   mating compatibility

53   mating compatibility

54   mating compatibility

55   parasitoids, parasites

56   Enicospilus cocoons

57   Enicospilus lebophagus

58   hyperparasites

59   Epiencyrtus

60   Rothschildia erycina

61   R. erycina caterpillar

62   R. erycina cocoon

63   R. erycina adult

64   shared parasitoids

65   Lespesia X R. erycina

66   predators

67   predators and cocoons

68   predators and cocoons

69   insect predators

70   parasites
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