Abstract
SUMMARY: Apterous Rhopalosiphum padi on the first leaf of cereal plants, developed faster and were more fecund at seedling to stem extension of barley, at tillering to earing of oats and at stem extension and earing of wheat. Feeding site on a mature plant also affected the rate of development and fecundity of the aphids; the largest and most fecund developed on the stems of oat and wheat plants. The consequences of these variations in reproductive performance are discussed in relation to the population dynamics of R. padi and its possible pest status in Britain.