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   <subfield code="u">Department of Zoology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK</subfield>
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   <subfield code="a">Age structure and dynamics of house dust mite populations</subfield>
   <subfield code="h">[Elektronische Daten]</subfield>
   <subfield code="c">[M. Colloff]</subfield>
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   <subfield code="a">Age structure—the relative numbers of eggs, immatures and adults—in populations of the house dust mitesDermatophagoides pteronyssinus andEuroglyphus maynei was investigated in four sequential monthly samples taken from mattresses in each of eight homes in Glasgow, Scotland. Additionally, age structure ofD. pteronyssinus was determined in samples taken bimonthly for 6 months from nine quadrats of a double mattress. It was found that although age structure varied considerably with time, forD. pteronyssinus in different homes the most common structure was one in which immatures were dominant, then eggs and then adults (31% of samples). Immatures or eggs were dominant in 75% of samples. ForE. maynei the age structure was quite different: the most common structure was one in which adults were dominant, then immatures and then eggs (69% of samples). In different quadrats of a double mattress, mean age structure ofD. pteronyssinus underwent a shift towards higher proportions of immatures and then eggs during the sampling period, which reflected the increase in population density detected during this period. Life and fecundity tables were constructed forD. pteronyssinus andE. maynei using previously-available in vitro data on fecundity and survivorship rates and hypothetical values based on means derived from a number of studies. From the tables the stable age distributions were calculated and compared with the age structures of the natural populations. It was found that mean age structure of natural populations ofD. pteronyssinus was fairly close to the predicted stable age distribution, but those ofE. maynei indicated the populations were in decline during the sampling period, a fact confirmed by abundance data. The concept that the rate of increase of house dust mite populations can be estimated by determining age structure of mites isolated from dust samples was explored using the hypothetical population parameters ofD. pteronyssinus. It was predicted that quite large differences in fecundity and mortality would not drastically alter the proportions of eggs, immatures and adults in stable populations. Eggs as components of the house dust mite population are considered seriously for the first time. Those ofD. pteronyssinus andE. maynei were identified and differentiated by allometry. It is stressed that forD. pteronyssinus, during the sampling period, half or more of the mites in a dust sample may be represented as eggs, and to ignore them is to deliberately make a less accurate estimate of population density than could be otherwise achieved.</subfield>
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   <subfield code="t">Experimental &amp; Applied Acarology</subfield>
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