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Interactions between searching strategies ofDrosophila parasitoids and the polymorphic behavior of their hosts
Authors:Y. Carton  M. B. Sokolowski
Affiliation:(1) Laboratoire de Biologie et Génétique Evolutives, CNRS, 91198 Gif, France;(2) Department of Biology, York University, M3JIP3 North York, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Two strains of Drosophila melanogaster, ldquoroverrdquo and ldquositter,rdquo differing in locomotion while foraging were simultaneously exposed to females of either Leptopilina boulardi or Ganaspis xanthopoda (parasitic Hymenoptera). These two parasitoids show different modes of host-searching behavior, ovipositor searching, or vibrotaxis, respectively. L. boulardi parasitized the sitter host strain significantly more than the rover. In contrast, G. xanthopoda parasitized the rover strain more than the sitter. In one case, L. boulardi selected far more sitters than rovers in population cage experiments. We also describe the frequencies of rovers and sitters in three natural populations where the local parasitoid community may have partially contributed to the differences in rover and sitter frequencies.
Keywords:rover/sitter  larval behavior  genetics  Drosophila melanogaster  parasitoid success  field population
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