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Parasitoid size as a function of host sex: potential for different sex allocation strategies

Authors :
Kraaijeveld, Alex R.
Adriaanse, Irma C.T.
Bergh, Bert
Source :
Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata; September 1999, Vol. 92 Issue: 3 p289-294, 6p
Publication Year :
1999

Abstract

Parasitoid females are known to preferentially allocate female eggs to hosts with the higher resource value, usually leading to oviposition of female eggs in larger hosts and male eggs in smaller hosts. For koinobiont parasitoids, if male and female hosts are of equal size at time of oviposition, but differ in size in later developmental stages, the sex of the host could be used to indicate future resource value. Using parasitoids of the braconid genus Asobara, which are larval parasitoids of Drosophila, it is shown that parasitoids emerging from female hosts are larger than those from male hosts. Given this difference in resource value, ovipositing females should preferentially allocate female eggs to female hosts. An alternative strategy would be to decrease the difference in resource value between male and female hosts by castrating male hosts. The primary sex ratio of A. tabidain their two main host species does not differ between male and female hosts. In contrast to A. tabida, A. citriis known to partially castrate male hosts, but this does not decrease the size difference between male and female hosts. As in A. tabida, there is no difference in sex allocation to male and female hosts in A. citri. Despite the clear difference between the resource value of male and female hosts, these parasitoid species do not seem to make optimal use of this difference. They may not be able to discriminate between host sexes or, alternatively, there is a presently unknown fitness disadvantage to ovipositing in female hosts.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00138703 and 15707458
Volume :
92
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs14712750
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1570-7458.1999.00549.x