首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Predatory specialization in the wasp <Emphasis Type="Italic">Sphex ingens</Emphasis> for the capture of katydids
Authors:Carlos Alberto dos Santos Souza  Jarbas Marçal Queiroz  Mauro Sergio Cruz Souza Lima  Jonas Pederassi
Institution:1.Programa de Pós Gradua??o em Biologia Animal, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde,Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro,Seropédica,Brazil;2.Departamento de Biologia, Campus Barra Mansa,Centro Universitário de Barra Mansa,Barra Mansa,Brazil;3.Departamento de Ciências Ambientais, Instituto de Florestas,Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro,Seropédica,Brazil;4.Departamento de Biologia, Campus Amilcar Ferreira Sobral,Universidade Federal do Piauí,Floriano,Brazil;5.Departamento de Vertebrados, Museu Nacional,Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil
Abstract:Sphex ingens is one of 30 species in the family Sphecidae that occur in the state of Rio de Janeiro. However, details of the behavior and sexual selection of natural populations of this wasp species have only recently been unveiled. In addition, the knowledge of its ecology is still poor. This is the first study on the feeding behavior interactions between S. ingens and prey captured to feed its larvae. Paralyzed prey were collected manually at the sites of wasp nests on Aventureiro Beach, Ilha Grande, Brazil during the provisioning activity of marked female S. ingens. All prey were preserved, their sex and sexual maturity were determined, and they were identified to the lowest possible taxonomic level. The body mass and size of the prey and female wasps were measured. Sphex ingens females captured only Pleminia vicina and Meroncidius sp. The body masses of wasps and katydids were positively correlated. The body mass of captured katydids was significantly dependent on the wasp’s wing length. Most of the prey were adult females, but the differences did not confirm possible preferences, as those values can be related to differences in the distribution and fluctuation in the population density of prey species and to the individual foraging strategies of female wasps. However, the predisposition to predatory specialization exhibited by S. ingens populations in Ilha Grande and elsewhere suggests that this interaction can be an important source of mortality for populations of pseudophylline katydid species.
Keywords:
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号