Two studies examined the novel proposal that implicit theories of intelligence (C. S. Dweck & E. L. Leggett, 1988) moderate both the effects of performance trends on ability inferences and the perceived diagnosticity of temporal versus normative feedback. Results from 613 adolescents and 42 teachers confirmed that entity theorists perceived initial outcome as more diagnostic and inferred higher ability in another (Study 1) and in the self (Study 2) in a declining outcome condition; incremental theorists perceived last outcome as more diagnostic and inferred higher ability in an ascending condition. Experimental induction of beliefs about ability had similar effects. As predicted, self-appraisal was affected more by temporal feedback among incremental theorists and by normative feedback among entity theorists. Results help resolve prior mixed findings regarding order effects and responses to temporal and normative evaluation.
Hieracium is an established model system for studying the cytological and genetic basis of gametophytic apomixis. In common with most known apomicts, the formation of 'maternal seed' is not exclusive in Hieracium, as apomixis operates in conjunction with a low level of sexuality. When this occurs the form of apomixis is described as 'facultative'. The formation of maternal seed in these plants is characterised by the avoidance of meiosis followed by the parthenogenetic development of an unreduced egg cell. In some ovules, however, meiosis does proceed, and sometimes the fertilisation of an egg cell presages embryogenesis. As a result, this mechanism of facultative apomixis leads to the formation of several different types of progeny, each representing a unique combination of meiosis/apomeiosis and fertilisation/parthenogenesis. Furthermore, fertilisation may involve either self or non-self pollen, leading to the recognition of six progeny classes from each individual plant. To facilitate an understanding of these processes we have developed a method for identifying individuals from different progeny classes based on the inheritance of introduced heterologous marker genes. This technique permits the screening of many thousands of seedlings at germination, and the consequent isolation of individuals associated with rare classes. Progeny profiles were determined for two apomictic accessions of Hieracium. Both were found to develop approximately 2.5% of their seed from meiotically derived eggs under the experimental conditions used and to have a rate of hybridity of approximately 2%. Evidence was also found for the action of a self-incompatibility mechanism operating in these plants despite the autonomous nature of apomixis in Hieracinum. As a demonstration of the utility of this approach, a study was conducted of polyembryony in one accession. The results indicate that there was a 7 fold greater likelihood that a meiotically derived seedling would arise in a polyembryonic seed than in a single-embryo seed. This indicates that facultative apomixis in Hieracium not only results from the simultaneous occurrence of sexual and asexual seed formation in the same capitulum as previously demonstrated, but most often as parallel processes within the same ovule.
The behavioural responses of flying western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis Pergande) (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) to the colour yellow and the odour anisaldehyde were examined. In a wind tunnel, upwind flight by female thrips was common in an airflow of 0.11 m s −1 but was impeded at 0.22 m s −1 . In the absence of anisaldehyde, flying female thrips exhibited an oriented response towards a yellow cue in the wind tunnel at a wind speed of 0.11 m s −1 . The main response of females to anisaldehyde in the wind tunnel was flight inhibition. There was no evidence of an odour-induced visual response, an odour-induced anemotactic response or chemotaxis by female thrips to anisaldehyde in wind tunnel bioassays, but chemokinesis was implicated. With a matrix of yellow or black water traps with and without anisaldehyde in a greenhouse sweet pepper crop, yellow traps with anisaldehyde caught more thrips adults than yellow traps without anisaldehyde, black traps with anisaldehyde and black traps without anisaldehyde (1.3, 28 and 721 times for males respectively and 2.4, 9 and 117 times for females, respectively). Differences between respective traps were statistically significant in almost all cases. Trapping experiments using a centre-baited trap design to reduce the interaction of anisaldehyde between baited and unbaited traps were undertaken in tomato and sweet pepper greenhouse crops. When the spatial distribution of the thrips adult population within the greenhouse was taken into account, yellow water traps with anisaldehyde caught between 11 and 15 times more female and 3 and 20 times more male F. occidentalis adults than yellow traps without anisaldehyde.
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