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Density-related foraging behaviour in Closterocerus tricinctus, a parasitoid of the leaf-mining moth, Cameraria hamadryadella
Authors:EDWARD F CONNOR  MICHELE J CARGAIN
Institution:Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, and Blandy Experimental Farm, Boyce, Virginia,;Department of Biology, Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, Virginia, U.S.A.
Abstract:
  • 1 We examined the foraging behaviour of the parasitoid wasp, Closterocerus tricinctus (Ashmead) (Chalcidoidea: Eulophidae), as it visited larvae of the leaf-mining moth, Cameraria hamadryadella (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae), in an outbreak population.
  • 2 We tracked females of C.tricinctus, recording the time spent searching for mines and handling host larvae. The density of leaf-mines (host larvae) and their condition were recorded for each leaf visited. A subset of leaves visited by C.tricinctus was enclosed in fine mesh bags so that foraging success could be determined by rearing or dissection. The average density of mines and the average leaf-area mined was estimated for a random sample of leaves from each tree.
  • 3 The selection of leaves upon which to forage appears to be density-dependent. C.tricinctus visits leaves with leaf-mine densities twice the average, and when switching leaves lands directly on leaf-mines 5 times more often than expected assuming random landings.
  • 4 The total time spent foraging on a leaf, the average time spent handling hosts, and the total search time within leaves tend to decline on leaves with many hosts, but the observed declines are not statistically significant.
  • 5 The proportion of leaf-mines visited within a leaf is strongly inversely density-dependent. 30% of visits to leaf-mines are re-visits and 29% of handling time is spent re-handling previously visited hosts. Furthermore, only 21% of visits to mines lead to successful parasitism. We suggest that self-interference and the avoidance behaviour of the host may reduce the number of visits of leaf-mines by C.tricinctus within a leaf.
  • 6 The effect of the strongly inversely density-dependent foraging investment within leaves is to offset the observed density-dependent pattern of leaf visitation making the overall spatial pattern of visitation by C.tricinctus to mines of C.hamadryadella inversely density-dependent.
  • 7 We suggest that the uncertainty of C.tricinctus surviving on multiply mined leaves because of density-dependent host mortality due to intraspecific competition in high-density host populations, the rarity of high-density host populations, and the rarity of multiply-mined leaves in low-density host populations combine to select against an aggregative response within leaves by C.tricinctus.
Keywords:Closterocerus tricinctus                        Cameraria hamadryadella            parasitoids  foraging behaviour  density-dependence  spatial density-dependence  leaf-miner
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