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Colony productivity and foundress behaviour of a native wasp versus an invasive social wasp
Author(s) -
Armstrong Tracy R.,
Stamp Nancy E.
Publication year - 2003
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.1365-2311.2003.00564.x
Subject(s) - paper wasp , biology , foraging , nest (protein structural motif) , polistes , aculeata , predation , ecology , vespidae , productivity , hymenoptera , zoology , biochemistry , macroeconomics , economics
Abstract.  1. Colony productivity, prey utilisation, and foundress behaviour of a North American native wasp ( Polistes fuscatus ) versus an European invasive wasp ( Polistes dominulus ) were investigated in a controlled field experiment with optimal versus natural foraging conditions. Colonies with the optimal prey foraging conditions were provided with prey ad libitum within an enclosed area. The other colonies foraged in the adjacent field–woodland but had the same nest conditions as the other treatment. 2. When given prey ad libitum , both wasp species captured similar amounts of prey and the conversion to total offspring biomass was similar. But P. dominulus colonies produced 2.5 times the number of workers as P. fuscatus colonies, reflecting the smaller size of P. dominulus wasps. 3. Foundresses of P. dominulus were observed more often building or repairing the nest, thereby contributing to the production of colonies with twice as many cells as colonies of P. fuscatus . Foundresses of P. dominulus showed more acts of aggression toward workers than did P. fuscatus foundresses, which was not a function of adult density on the nest. 4. At the end of the experiment, P. dominulus colonies with optimal prey foraging conditions still had a high level of egg‐laying and peaked in the number of pupae then, whereas egg‐laying and the number of pupae per colony of the other treatments began to decline 2–3 weeks earlier. These results indicate that P. dominulus is more opportunistic than P. fuscatus , which may account in part for P. dominulus 's success as an introduced species in North America.

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