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Sex ratios in field populations of Epidinocarsis lopezi, an exotic parasitoid of the cassava mealybug, in Africa
Authors:MARIANNE J. VAN DIJKEN  PETER NEUENSCHWANDER  JACQUES J. M. VAN ALPHEN  WINFRED N. O. HAMMOND
Affiliation:Department of Population Biology, University of Leiden, The Netherlands, and;Biological Control Program, International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Cotonou, Benin
Abstract:Abstract.
  • 1 In cassava fields in Africa, population sex ratios of Epidinocarsis fopezi vaned from 0.44 (males to total parasitoids) at low host densities to highly male-biased ratios of 0.70 at high host densities.
  • 2 This variability is caused by the difference in allocation of sons and daughters to hosts of different sizes, through the following mechanisms: (a) small, i.e. second instar, hosts are mainly used for the production of male offspring, whereas in large, i.e. third instar, hosts a variable, female-biased sex ratio is produced; (b) E.fopezi does not selectively oviposit into large hosts but always accepts both small and large hosts for oviposition upon encountering; (c) in the field, this parasitoid is time-limited, and not egg-limited. On the basis of an optimal diet model, such general host acceptance is shown to be the best strategy.
  • 3 Thus, sex ratio increases with host density for three reasons: the proportion of small hosts encountered in the field increases with increasing host density, small hosts are used for male production, and hosts are always accepted when encountered.
Keywords:Sex ratio    Epidinocarsis lopezi    Phenacoccus manihoti    biological control    parasitoid    optimal host selection
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