Influence of host size on oviposition behaviour and fitness of Elachertus cacoeciae attacking a low-density population of spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana larvae
Jg. Fidgen et al., Influence of host size on oviposition behaviour and fitness of Elachertus cacoeciae attacking a low-density population of spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana larvae, ECOL ENT, 25(2), 2000, pp. 156-164
1. Oviposition behaviour and host size - fitness relationships of a gregari
ous, idiobiont ectoparasitoid, Elachertus cacoeciae (Howard) (Hymenoptera:
Eulophidae), were studied by implanting one fourth-, fifth-, and sixth-inst
ar spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens) (Lepidoptera: Tortrici
dae) larva per tree in a stand where the density of the wild C. fumiferana
population was low.
2. Development time of E. cacoeciae larvae was quickest on fifth-instar C.
fumiferana larvae, which were the preferred hosts for oviposition.
3. Brood sex ratio (proportion of females) was related positively to increa
sing C. fumiferana instar, indicating that more females were laid on larger
hosts.
4. Parasitoid offspring size increased with increasing C. fumiferana instar
and decreased with increasing brood size on smaller hosts. Female but not
male size was related positively to increasing brood sex ratio (proportion
of females).
5. Under laboratory conditions, parasitoid longevity was related positively
to parasitoid size and realised lifetime fecundity, and clutch size was re
lated positively to host size.
6. These results suggest that selection of intermediate-sized C. fumiferana
larvae may be adaptive for E. cacoeciae.