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Food plant and herbivore host species affect the outcome of intrinsic competition among parasitoid larvae
Author(s) -
POELMAN ERIK H.,
GOLS RIETA,
GUMOVSKY ALEX V.,
CORTESERO ANNEMARIE,
DICKE MARCEL,
HARVEY JEFFREY A.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/een.12150
Subject(s) - biology , parasitoid , braconidae , pieridae , competition (biology) , herbivore , pieris rapae , host (biology) , brassicaceae , parasitism , ecology , larva
1. In nature, several parasitoid species often exploit the same stages of a common herbivore host species and are able to coexist despite competitive interactions amongst them. Less is known about the direct effects of resource quality on intrinsic interactions between immature parasitoid stages. The present study is based on the hypothesis that variation in the quality or type of plant resources on which the parasitoids indirectly develop may be complementary and thus facilitate niche segregation favouring different parasitoids in intrinsic competition under different dietary regimes. 2. The present study investigated whether two herbivore species, the cabbage butterflies P ieris brassicae and P ieris rapae (Pieridae), and the quality of two important food plants, B rassica oleracea and B rassica nigra (Brassicaceae), affect the outcome of intrinsic competition between their primary larval endoparasitoids, the gregarious C otesia glomerata (Braconidae) and the solitary H yposoter ebeninus (Ichneumonidae). 3. H yposoter ebeninus is generally an intrinsically superior competitor over C . glomerata . However, C . glomerata survived more antagonistic encounters with H . ebeninus when both developed in P . brassicae rather than in P . rapae caterpillars, and while its host was feeding on B . nigra rather than B . oleracea . Moreover, H . ebeninus benefitted from competition by its higher survival in multiparasitised hosts. 4. These results show that both plant and herbivore species mediate the battleground on which competitive interactions between parasitoids are played out and may affect the outcomes of these interactions in ways that enable parasitoids to segregate their niches. This in turn may promote coexistence among parasitoid species that are associated with the same herbivore host.