Mortality process in relation to aggregation in the southern green stink bug

Abstract
Summary: A simple experiment of simulation was done to analyze the natural mortality process of young larval colonies and egg masses of the southern green stink bug. In this experiment, a degree of contagiousness was allowed in regard to the action of a mortality factor, and was defined as the mean number killed per a colony or an egg mass by the mortality factor within a unit time and the number killed per a colony was assumed to follow the Poisson series with the mean . Thus each component of the Poisson series was opposed to each colony or egg mass which was taken at random from 162 egg masses, 135 and 117 colonies of the first and the second instar larvae, respectively.It was revealed that mortality factors in the field did not act with a small degree of contagiosness, e. g., on all colonies or egg masses, but acted with a large degree of contagiousness, e. g., on some of the colonies or egg masses. Thus differential survival somewhat in all or none way occurred among the insect colonies irrespective of their initial sizes. These results were well explained by taking actual mortality factors into account.

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