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Aggregation in field parasitoid populations: foraging time allocation by a population of <i>Diadegma</i> (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae)
159
Citations
21
References
1983
Year
BiologyForagingField StudyNatural SciencesEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionDifferent DensitiesHyperparasiteForaging Time AllocationInsect Social BehaviorHigh Host DensitiesParasitologyField Parasitoid Populations
ABSTRACT. A field study was made of foraging time allocation by a population of parasitic wasps, Diadegma spp. (Ichneumonidae), to plants containing different densities of their hosts, the caterpillars of Plutella xylostella (L.). The parasitoid population exhibited a clear aggregative response, spending more total time on higher density patches, which probably resulted from wasps making more and longer visits to these densities. Despite this aggregation, positive density dependent parasitism was not found. The functional response of the Diadegma population exhibited an upper asymptote at high host densities, probably due to an increase in the proportion of time spent handling hosts, which countered the effect of aggregation. While Diadegma may select and forage preferentially on plants with higher host density, they do not exhibit the tendency, predicted by some optional foraging models, to exploit progressively less profitable plants during a foraging bout. Some factors affecting patterns of parasitoid foraging in the field are discussed.
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