Selection Strategies of Parasitized Hosts in a Generalist Parasitoid Depend on Patch Quality but Also on Host Size |
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Authors: | Marlène Goubault Julie Fourrier Liliane Krespi Denis Poinsot Anne Marie Cortesero |
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Institution: | (1) UPRES EA 3193, Ecobiologie des Insectes Parasitoïdes, Université de Rennes 1, Campus de Beaulieu (Bat. 25), 263 avenue du Général Leclerc, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France |
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Abstract: | Host rejection, superparasitism, and ovicide are three possible host selection strategies that parasitoid females can adopt when they encounter parasitized hosts. These differ in costs (in terms of time and energy required) and benefits (in terms of number and quality of offspring produced). Their relative payoff should vary with patch quality, (i.e., proportion of parasitized hosts present), and female choice between them should be adapted accordingly. We conducted behavioral observations to test the effect of the ratio of parasitized/unparasitized hosts present in a patch on the host selection strategies of Pachycrepoideus vindemmiae Rondani (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae). This species being a generalist known to attack hosts of a great range of size, we also tested the impact of host size on female decisions with two host species differing greatly in size (Drosophila melanogaster and Delia radicum). We evaluated the adaptive value of each strategy in relation to host parasitization status and host size by measuring their duration and the potential number of offspring produced. |
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Keywords: | patch quality host quality ovicide superparasitism self-superparasitism behavior |
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