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Fitness consequences of body-size-dependent host species selection in a generalist ectoparasitoid

机译:全能外寄生体中依赖于体型的宿主物种选择的适应性后果

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In insect parasitoids, offspring fitness is strongly influenced by the adult female's choice of host, particularly in ectoparasitoids that attack non-growing host stages. We quantified the fitness consequences of size-dependent host species selection in Dirhinus giffardii, a solitary ectoparasitoid of tephritid fruit fly pupae. We first showed a positive correlation between the size of emerged D. giffardii wasps and the size of their host fruit fly species (in order of decreasing size): Bactrocera latifrons, B. cucurbitae, B. dorsalis or Ceratitis capitata. We then manipulated individual wasps to show that the parasitoid preferred to attack the largest (B. latifrons) to the smallest (C. capitata) host species when provided with a choice, and laid a greater proportion of female eggs in B. latifrons than in C. capitata. There were no differences in developmental time or offspring survival between individuals reared from these two host species. Finally, we compared the foraging efficiency of large versus small wasps (reared from B. latifrons vs C. capitata) under two different laboratory conditions: high versus low host habitat quality, given that realized fecundity in parasitoids may be influenced by either egg-limited or time-limited factors. Under both conditions, large wasps parasitized more hosts than did small ones as a consequence of high searching efficiency in the host-poor habitat, and high capacity for adjusting egg maturation in response to host availability in the host-rich habitat. Considering the flexibility of body growth, the apparent lack of cost of achieving large body size in either development or survival, and the strong dependence of realized reproductive success on a female's size, we argue that body size may be a key to understanding evolution of host species selection in ectoparasitoids. We also discuss constraints upon the evolution of size-dependent host species selection in parasitoids.
机译:在昆虫寄生性寄生虫中,成年雌性对寄主的选择会强烈影响其后代的适应能力,尤其是在攻击非生长寄主阶段的外寄生虫中。我们量化了Dirhinus giffardii中的大小依赖的宿主物种选择的适应性后果,Dirhinus giffardii是一种单生的拟南芥果蝇p。我们首先显示出出现的D. giffardii黄蜂的大小与其寄主果蝇的大小(按大小递减顺序)呈正相关(Bactrocera latifrons,B。cucurbitae,B。dorsalis或Ceratitis capitata)。然后,我们对单个黄蜂进行了处理,以显示该类寄生虫在有选择的情况下更喜欢攻击最大的(B. latifrons)到最小的(C. capitata)寄主物种,并且在B. latifrons中产卵的雌性比例高于在C. capitata。从这两种寄主物种饲养的个体之间,发育时间或后代存活率没有差异。最后,我们在两种不同的实验室条件下比较了大黄蜂和小黄蜂(由B. latifrons与C. capitata饲养)的觅食效率:寄主生境质量的高低,考虑到寄生卵的繁殖力可能受任一卵限制的影响或时间限制因素。在这两种情况下,大型黄蜂比小型寄生虫寄生更多的寄主,这是因为在宿主贫乏的栖息地中搜索效率高,并且具有高适应能力,能够根据宿主丰富的栖息地中宿主的可利用性来调节卵的成熟度。考虑到身体生长的灵活性,在发育或生存中实现大体型的明显缺乏成本以及实现生殖成功对女性体型的强烈依赖,我们认为体型可能是理解宿主进化的关键异种类中的物种选择。我们还讨论了寄生虫中依赖大小的宿主物种选择进化的限制。

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