Abstract
Reciprocal crosses were made between the closely related species Planococcus citri and Planococcus ficus by using mating inducers. The pheromone responses of the hybrid offspring were bioassayed. The sex ratio of the offspring showed a striking shift in favour of females in comparison with homospecific matings mainly because of high mortality of male nymphs during the first instar. Hybrid males gave positive reactions only to pheromone extracts from the maternal species and showed no response to extracts from the paternal species. This result may be explained by the lecanoid chromosome system known for mealybug males, in which the paternal set of chromosomes becomes heterochro‐matic (condensed and genetically inactive) starting from early embryogeny. Further evidence is, however, presented that (at least in certain tissues) the paternal set reverts to the euchromatic state and to genetical activity.