
Variability of the body size in females of the Cosmocerca ornata (Dujardin, 1845), a parasite of marsh frogs, is studied. The influence of both biotic (age, sex and a phenotype of the host, density of the parasite population) and abiotic (a season of the year, water temperature) factors on the formation of the body size structure in the C. ornata hemipopulation (infrapopulation) is demonstrated. The body size structure of the C. ornata hemipopulation is characterized by the low level of individual variability as within certain subpopulation groups of amphibians (sex, age and phenotype), so within the population of marsh frogs as a whole. The more distinct are the differences in biology and ecology of these host subpopulations, the more pronounced is the variability in the body size of C ornata.
Male, Phenotype, Sex Factors, Nematoda, Ranidae, Wetlands, Age Factors, Anatomic Variation, Temperature, Animals, Body Size, Female, Seasons
Male, Phenotype, Sex Factors, Nematoda, Ranidae, Wetlands, Age Factors, Anatomic Variation, Temperature, Animals, Body Size, Female, Seasons
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