The flight heights of chalcid wasps (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea) in a lowland bornean rain forest: Fig wasps are the high fliers

Citation
Sg. Compton et al., The flight heights of chalcid wasps (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea) in a lowland bornean rain forest: Fig wasps are the high fliers, BIOTROPICA, 32(3), 2000, pp. 515-522
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
BIOTROPICA
ISSN journal
00063606 → ACNP
Volume
32
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
515 - 522
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3606(200009)32:3<515:TFHOCW>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
Tropical rain forests are characterized by their rich plant diversity and h ighly diverse insect faunas containing mainly rare species. Phytophagous an d parasitoid insects utilizing such fragmented resources often must travel considerable distances to find suitable hosts. For small, weak-flying insec ts, entry into the fast-flowing air above the canopy can provide one way by which long-distance dispersal is achieved. Using sticky traps placed at di fferent heights in a lowland rain forest of Borneo, we compared the diurnal and nocturnal flight heights of chalcids, a group of mainly very small par asitoids and phytophages, to determine if the air above the canopy was used for dispersal. Most families were represented throughout the range of trap heights, including those above the general canopy. A higher proportion of individuals were trapped above the canopy at night than during the day. Fig wasps were exceptional in that they were trapped almost entirely above the canopy. They included species associated with host trees that do not Fruit in the canopy, suggesting that these short-lived, slow-flying insects acti vely fly up above the canopy and then use the wind to passively carry them the long distances needed to reach their highly localized and ephemeral hos ts. Once the fig wasps detect the species-specific volatiles released by th eir host figs, they then may fly down into the canopy, where the lower wind speeds would allow them to fly actively upwind to their hosts.