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Host‐searching responses to herbivory‐associated chemical information and patch use depend on mating status of female solitary parasitoid wasps
Authors:SOICHI KUGIMIYA  TAKESHI SHIMODA  ERIC WAJNBERG  MASAYOSHI UEFUNE  JUNJI TAKABAYASHI
Affiliation:1. National Institute for Agro‐Environmental Sciences, Tsukuba, Japan;2. National Agricultural Research Center, Tsukuba, Japan;3. Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, 06903 Sophia Antipolis Cedex, France;4. Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University, Otsu, Japan
Abstract:
1. In a tritrophic interaction system consisting of plants, herbivores, and their parasitoids, chemicals released from plants after herbivory are known to play important roles for many female parasitoids to find their hosts efficiently. On the plant side, chemical information associated with herbivory can act as an indirect defence by attracting the natural enemies of the host herbivores. 2. However, mated and virgin females of haplodiploid parasitoids might not necessarily respond to such chemical cues in the same way. Since virgin females can produce only sons, they might refrain from searching for hosts to invest eggs until copulation, in order to produce both sexes. 3. Here, we investigated differential host‐searching behaviours shown by mated and virgin females in the solitary parasitoid wasp, Cotesia vestalis, in response to herbivory‐associated chemical information from cruciferous plants infested by their host larvae, Plutella xylostella. 4. Mated females showed a significantly higher flight preference for host‐infested plants over intact plants, while no preference was observed with virgin females. Mated females also showed more intensive antennal searching and ovipositor probing behaviours to leaf squares with wounds caused by hosts than did virgin females. Furthermore, mated females stayed longer in host patches with higher parasitism rates than virgin females. 5. These results indicate that mating status of C. vestalis females clearly influences their host‐searching behaviour in response to herbivory‐associated chemical information and patch exploitation. Female parasitoids seem to forage for hosts depending on their own physiological condition in a tritrophic system.
Keywords:Cotesia vestalis  herbivore‐induced plant volatiles  indirect defence  sex allocation  tritrophic interaction
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