Abstract
An account is given of the habitat and ecology of a wrackbed population of Coelopa frigida (Fab.). The spatial distribution of the third-instar larvae was found to be patchy. This is due to a preference of adult flies for oviposition sites in zones of high temperature within the wrackbed. The relationship between larval density and temperature was found to account only in part for the patchy distribution, a second factor being the formation of family aggregates within each temperature zone. The effect of this type of spatial distribution on the interpretation of genetic sampling methods for the population is discussed.Samples of third-instar larvae from the wrackbed population have been analysed for the presence of recessive embryonic lethals in three consecutive years from 1957 to 1959. From a total of 528 gametes tested, 44 recessive embryonic lethals were isolated. Cross tests for allelism showed that certain lethals were repeated within samples taken in the same year.The gross frequency of embryonic lethals is shown to be independent of seasonal changes in population density. Estimates of gene frequency are made for certain individual lethals and these are shown to be greater than expected on the basis of the census size of the population. Possible causes of this discrepancy are examined.