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Effects of wax bloom variation in Brassica oleracea on foraging by a vespid wasp
Author(s) -
Eigenbrode Sanford D.,
Rayor Linda,
Chow Jennifer,
Latty Paul
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
entomologia experimentalis et applicata
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.765
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1570-7458
pISSN - 0013-8703
DOI - 10.1046/j.1570-7458.2000.00726.x
Subject(s) - bloom , biology , wax , brassica oleracea , hymenoptera , botany , predation , aculeata , foraging , horticulture , ecology , biochemistry
Foraging by individual Polistes dominulus (Christ) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) was observed and compared on Brassica oleracea L. plants that differed in surface wax bloom. Twenty‐six wasps, previously trained to forage on plants for 4th instar Trichoplusia ni (Walker), were presented in the greenhouse with mixtures of plants with normal wax bloom or genetically reduced wax bloom, and on which T. ni caterpillars had been placed. During foraging, the wasps were observed to slip significantly more frequently from the leaf surfaces of normal‐wax bloom plants than from reduced‐wax bloom plants (129 vs 63 occurrences) and to retrieve significantly fewer pieces of caterpillar after attack on normal‐wax bloom plants (151 vs 223 pieces). Altogether the wasps retrieved 333 caterpillar pieces from reduced‐wax bloom plants and 248 pieces from normal‐wax bloom plants. Despite these differences, the number of caterpillars attacked and killed did not differ between the two wax bloom types (116 vs 121), nor did handling time for individual attacks (time from contact with prey until prey piece was carried to the nest) (170±12.5 s vs 180±10.5 s). Thus, in contrast with previous reports for smaller predators, wax bloom variation in B. oleracea did not influence the effectiveness of P. dominulus as a predator of T. ni .

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