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Host‐size decisions of female parasitoid wasps seeking hidden hosts
Author(s) -
Krimmel Billy A.,
Morse Douglass H.
Publication year - 2019
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.12733
Subject(s) - biology , parasitoid , braconidae , ovipositor , host (biology) , parasitoid wasp , zoology , crambidae , hymenoptera , caterpillar , predation , paper wasp , lepidoptera genitalia , ecology , vespidae
1. Choice of host size may play a critical role in parasitoid success, a task that takes on added complications when dealing with concealed hosts, but most such studies of insect behaviour have only taken place in the laboratory. 2. This study investigates the success of a wasp ( Alabagrus texanus : Braconidae) in finding host caterpillars Herpetogramma theseusalis (Crambidae) of the most effectively handled size hidden in shelters, in both the field and the laboratory. 3. First, the study tested wasp preference and success in parasitizing large, middle‐sized and small caterpillars (> 5, 3–5, < 3 mm) presented in the open, one at a time, in the laboratory. The wasps attacked (inserted or attempted to insert their ovipositor) a higher proportion of middle‐sized (3–5 mm) caterpillars compared with either small (< 3 mm) or large (> 5 mm) caterpillars. Naïve wasps attacked large caterpillars more often than did experienced wasps. Wasps responded to increasing caterpillar size by increasing the number of legs used to pin their prey rather than by increasing handling time. 4. The frequencies of visits to shelters in the field containing a majority of either large or middle‐sized caterpillars were then compared, followed by a test providing the wasps with similar choices under controlled laboratory conditions. Wasps most frequently visited shelters containing a majority of middle‐sized caterpillars both in the field and under controlled laboratory conditions. 5. The combined results confirmed that the wasps can size‐select their hosts both in the field and in laboratory tests.

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