LONG-DISTANCE ASSESSMENT OF PATCH PROFITABILITY THROUGH VOLATILE INFOCHEMICALS BY THE PARASITOIDS COTESIA-GLOMERATA AND COTESIA-RUBECULA (HYMENOPTERA, BRACONIDAE)
Jbf. Geervliet et al., LONG-DISTANCE ASSESSMENT OF PATCH PROFITABILITY THROUGH VOLATILE INFOCHEMICALS BY THE PARASITOIDS COTESIA-GLOMERATA AND COTESIA-RUBECULA (HYMENOPTERA, BRACONIDAE), Biological control, 11(2), 1998, pp. 113-121
Using two closely related larval parasitoids (Cotesia spp.) of Pieris
caterpillars 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 pro
cess. The effect of host densities on the olfactory responses of naive
and experienced females was studied in two-choice wind tunnel experim
ents. Naive females of Cotesia glomerata and C. rubecula discriminated
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. In C. glomerata sensit
ivity to low host densities increased after experience. The effect of
multiple oviposition experiences of C. glomera ta on different plants
with different host densities was measured in two-choice situations. F
emales indeed use experienced host density of a patch as a cue to esta
blish 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. For C. glomerata, the retention time
of learned odors was 3 days. This study illustrates the importance of
quantitative differences in infochemicals to host-foraging decisions f
rom a distance. It further demonstrates how experience can modify the
parasitoid's response to variation in resource availability. (C) 1998
Academic Press.