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Host handling and specificity of the hyperparasitoid wasp, Dendrocerus carpenteri (Curtis) (Hym., Megaspilidae): importance of host age and species
Author(s) -
Chow A.,
Mackauer M.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of applied entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.795
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1439-0418
pISSN - 0931-2048
DOI - 10.1046/j.1439-0418.1999.00322.x
Subject(s) - biology , ovipositor , parasitoid , aphid , acyrthosiphon pisum , pupa , host (biology) , braconidae , hymenoptera , zoology , parasitoid wasp , larva , homoptera , ecology , botany , aphididae , pest analysis
The oviposition behaviour of Dendrocerus carpenteri (Curtis), an ectophagous hyperparasitoid of aphidiine wasps inside mummified aphids was examined. Hyperparasitoids were provided in the laboratory with pea aphids ( Acyrthosiphon pisum ) which had been parasitized by three different species of aphidiine wasps ( Aphidius ervi, Ephedrus californicus and Praon pequodorum ) ranging in physiological age from the late larval stage to the late pupal stage. Females accepted only the hosts inside mummified aphids; they ignored live aphids, and did not accept dead, but not yet mummified aphids, although the latter were sometimes probed with the ovipositor. Female behaviour in handling A. ervi or E. californicus mummies did not change with experience; handling and oviposition times were stereotypic. However, naive females needed experience to locate the cocoon of P. pequodorum and distinguish it from the empty aphid mummy. Host acceptance and specificity were influenced more by the developmental stage than the species of the primary parasitoid. In dichotomous choice tests, hyperparasitoids ‘preferred’ prepupae over younger pupae of A. ervi , but they did not distinguish between these stages of E. californicus; older pupae were accepted at a low rate. Host preference was not influenced by conditioning on the rearing host. We consider several constraints on the host range of D. carpenteri , and discuss alternative explanations of differential hyperparasitism in the field.

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