Foraging behaviour of a leafminer parasitoid in the field |
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Authors: | J. CASAS |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Plant Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich |
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Abstract: | Abstract. 1. The searching behaviour of the parasitoid Sympiesis sericeicornis Nees (Hymenoptera, Eulophidae) is analysed under field conditions. 2. Females were tracked when flying around the canopy of apple trees infested with the tentiform leafminer Phyllonorycter cydoniella (D. & S.)(Lepidoptera, Gracillariidae) and their behaviour studied at the level of a single mine and at the level of several mines on the same leaf (patch level). 3. The presence of mines is detected during flight. The foraging behaviour at the patch level is efficient: the female is able to distinguish the suitable from the unsuitable hosts and handle the suitable hosts first. Not all mines are visited before departure from the leaf and those left unvisited are exclusively mines without suitable hosts. The patch leaving rule is discussed. 4. An ethogram of the behaviour on the mine is constructed. Selected behavioural categories are analysed for different combinations of mine content and outcome of the visit to the mine. The assessment of the mine content is done in a differential way, quickly and without mistakes. 5. The results are discussed in the context of two environmental factors, wind speed and temperature, which reduce the available time for searching. They are also related to the growing percentage of unsuitable hosts during each host generation. Tentiform mines remain attractive for a long period of time, even after parasitism or emergence of the adult, and their examination reduces the rate of host discovery. |
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Keywords: | Foraging behaviour parasitism leaf miner Phyllonorycter Sympiesis |
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