Breeding Strategies in Females of the Parasitoid Wasp Spalangia endius: Effects of Mating Status and Size |
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Authors: | B. H. King |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, 60115 |
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Abstract: | Does the mating status or body size of a female parasitoid wasp affect her host size choice or propensity to burrow? In Spalangia endius, using smaller hosts appears to reduce a female's cost of parasitization but not her son's fitness. However, virgin females, which produce only sons, did not preferentially parasitize smaller hosts. Mated females also showed no host size preference. Mated females burrowed more than virgins in the presence of hosts, although not in their absence. Burrowing may reduce a mated female's harassment from males, and not burrowing may increase a virgin female's chance of mating because males avoid burrowing. Mating did not increase female longevity. Greater female size increased the offspring production of mated females burrowing for hosts but not in the absence of burrowing and not in virgin females. A female's size had no significant effect on whether her first drill attempt was on a large or a small host or on the duration of her successful drills. |
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Keywords: | breeding strategies arrhenotoky virgin host size body size parasitoid |
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