Density-related sterility in Eretmocerus mundus |
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Authors: | Dan Gerling Rivka Fried |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Zoology, The George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, 69978, Israel |
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Abstract: | While studying the reproductive capacity of Eretmocerus mundus Mercet (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae) we found that varying numbers of females were sterile. Investigations showed that sterility occurred also in field populations, but at a very low rate. Laboratory sterility was significantly correlated with crowding of the parental females during oviposition. Whitefly hosts from which fertile of sterile females emerged did not differ in size, neither did the hind tibiae of fertile females differ in dimensions from those of sterile ones. Behavior of sterile females differed from that of the fertile ones in several parameters. They exhibited less leg drumming, used the ovipositor more frequently and for shorter durations, and changed more readily from probing to host stinging, and from a number of activities to walking. Altogether, their behavior appeared more restless and caused them to contact more hosts than fertile females. The possibility that the sterility is caused by crowding alone, or by the activity of microorganisms acting under crowded conditions, and the merits of the phenomenon for biological pest control are discussed. |
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Keywords: | whiteflies Bemisia Eretmocerus Hymenoptera parasitoids crowding sterility |
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