Abstract
Theory suggests that coexistence is enhanced among competing insects breeding in discrete and ephemeral resources, if the larvae are aggregated over the breeding sites. Field data on fruit-breeding diptera show that they have a negative binomial distribution over fruit items and are highly aggregated. Variation in breeding site quality or in the fecundity of female flies is unlikely to be the cause of such aggregation. As long as each site receives rather few visits from flies, the observed distributions could be caused by females laying their eggs in clutches (laying several eggs at a time). Most insects breeding in discrete and ephemeral resources are likely to have aggregated distributions; large numbers of species are expected to coexist in such sites.