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Host population structure affects field sex ratios of the heteronomous hyperparasitoid, Coccophagus atratus
Author(s) -
DONALDSON J. S.,
WALTER G. H.
Publication year - 1991
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/j.1365-2311.1991.tb00190.x
Subject(s) - biology , host (biology) , sex ratio , instar , brood , zoology , population , larva , ecology , demography , sociology
.1 Second instar Filippia gemina de Lotto scale insects are the preferred hosts of female Coccophugus atrutus Compere larvae. These scale insects were found on their host plants, Chrysanthemoides monilifera Norlindh and Cliffortia strobilifera Mettenius, only at certain times during a 1 year sampling programme. 2 Late larval instars and prepupae of C.atratus , and a Metaphycus species, are the preferred hosts of male C.atratus larvae. These hosts, although they occurred on the same host plants as hosts for female C.atratus , were most numerous at different times during the sampling period. 3 The ratio of hosts suitable for C.atratus varied from a predominance of hosts suitable for females through to a predominance of hosts suitable for males. Sex ratios of adult C.atratus followed a similar trend but did not reflect, exactly, the ratio of available hosts. Differences in mortality between sexes and hyperparasitism may account for this anomaly. 4 Variable population sex ratios observed in C.atratus apparently result from the behaviour of individual females in which brood sex ratios are dependent on the relative availability of hosts for males and hosts for females. This behaviour, in turn, may result from variability in the host population structure but may also result from selection pressures operating at the time that heteronomous hyperparasitism evolved.