K. Takasu et Da. Nordlund, Host recognition kairomones for Anaphes iole Girault, an egg parasitoid ofthe western tarnished plant bug, BIOL CONTRO, 22(1), 2001, pp. 60-65
Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine if chemicals derived fro
m host adults or eggs influence the host location/recognition behavior of A
naphes iole Girault (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) females. Females often probed
with their ovipositor, in or near punctures made by Lygus hesperus Knight (
Hemiptera:Miridae) females on Gelcarin oviposition packs, in a way that was
similar to the probing of protruding host eggs. When the surface Parafilm,
of the Gelcarin packs that L. hesperus females had oviposited was replaced
with clean punctured Parafilm, fe. males also responded to the punctures,
suggesting that the internal contents of the Gelcarin packs cause the probi
ng behavior. Females probed punctures on a piece of Parafilm covering the a
bdominal contents of host females and males, but they did not respond to pu
nctures in Parafilm covering distilled water or Rinaldini solution. Females
also probed glass cylinders coated with host hemolymph, contents of host f
emales or males, or seminal depository. These results suggest that A. iole
females use chemicals derived from host eggs or adults in host recognition.
Because females responded to mature ovarian eggs embedded in Gelcarin pack
s, a possible source of this stimulant may be the ovaries of the L. hesperu
s females. Punctured Parafilm removed from Gelcarin packs which host nymphs
had probed with their mouthparts stimulated antennation by A iole females,
but not ovipositor probing. Punctures on Gelcarin packs that had never bee
n exposed to hosts sometimes stimulated ovipositor probing by female A iole
. Because the probing response was not elicited from A. iole females by pun
ctured Parafilm covering nothing, distilled water, or liquid from Gelcarin
packs, the presence of the gel underneath punctured Parafilm may elicit an
ovipositor probing response from A. iole females. Host-derived chemicals pl
ay an important role with physical properties of host eggs and the substrat
e in which host eggs are embedded, on host recognition and acceptance by A.
iole females. (C) 2001 Academic Press.