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Egg predation within the nests of social wasps: a new genus and species of Phlaeothripidae,and evolutionary consequences of Thysanoptera invasive behaviour
Authors:Adriano Cavalleri  André R. de Souza  Fábio Prezoto  Laurence A. Mound
Affiliation:1. PPG‐Ecologia, Departamento de Ecologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, , Porto Alegre, Brazil;2. PPG‐Ciências Biológicas‐Comportamento e Biologia Animal, Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora, , Juiz de fora, Brazil;3. CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, , Canberra, ACT, Australia
Abstract:
The insects known as thrips are commonly thought of as flower‐living and pestiferous organisms, but we report here a novel interaction between a phlaeothripine thrips species, Mirothrips arbiter gen. et sp. nov. and three species of social paper wasps in Brazil. This thrips species breeds inside the wasp colonies, and larval and adult thrips feed on wasp eggs, which become severely damaged. Infested nests can contain up to 300 M. arbiter gen. et sp. nov. individuals. The closest relatives of M. arbiter are two presumably predaceous species: Mirothrips bicolor sp. nov. , which inhabits abandoned Cecidomyiidae galls, and Mirothrips analis comb. nov. , described from individuals collected in the silken bags of the caterpillars of Psychidae moths. The behaviour exhibited by M. arbiter represents one of the most evolutionarily advanced lifestyles known among Thysanoptera, and we predict that other polistine species serve as hosts for this thrips in Brazil. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 109 , 332–341.
Keywords:invasive behaviour  Mischocyttarus  nest symbionts  paper wasps  Polistes  Polistinae  Thysanoptera
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