• Title of article

    Long-Distance Assessment of Patch Profitability through Volatile Infochemicals by the ParasitoidsCotesia glomerataandC. rubecula(Hymenoptera: Braconidae)

  • Author/Authors

    Jacqueline B. F. Geervliet، نويسنده , , Sybrand Ariëns، نويسنده , , Marcel Dicke، نويسنده , , Louise E. M. Vet، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    113
  • To page
    121
  • Abstract
    Using two closely related larval parasitoids (Cotesiaspp.) ofPieriscaterpillars we tested the hypothesis that parasitoids are capable of assessing patch profitability from a distance by showing differential responses to odors from plants infested with different host densities. We furthermore tested whether experience improves this assessment process. The effect of host densities on the olfactory responses of naive and experienced females was studied in two-choice wind tunnel experiments. Naive females ofCotesia glomerataandC. rubeculadiscriminated between odors from plants with high and low densities. Responsiveness of naive females to odors from host-infested leaves increased with an increase in the total number of feeding hosts. InC. glomeratasensitivity to low host densities increased after experience. The effect of multiple oviposition experiences ofC. glomerataon different plants with different host densities was measured in two-choice situations. Females indeed use experienced host density of a patch as a cue to establish a preference, but the sequence of the experienced host densities influences the behavior to a great extent. The first experience does not entirely fix their behavior. ForC. glomerata,the retention time of learned odors was 3 days. This study illustrates the importance of quantitative differences in infochemicals to host-foraging decisions from a distance. It further demonstrates how experience can modify the parasitoidʹs response to variation in resource availability.
  • Keywords
    Crucifers , Tropaeolum , Learning , Phenotypic plasticity , preference induction , host-finding behavior , Experience , infochemical use. , Cotesia glomerata , Pieris , Cotesia rubecula , BRASSICA
  • Journal title
    Biological Control
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Biological Control
  • Record number

    720554