Publication | Open Access
Extremely female-biased sex ratio and lethal male-male combat in a parasitoid wasp, Melittobia australica (Eulophidae)
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Citations
34
References
2003
Year
<it>Melittobia</it> <it>australica</it> (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) is a gregarious ectoparasitoid of the prepupae and pupae of solitary wasps and bees. The males never disperse from their natal patch, and mating takes place only on the host from which they emerged. We measured the offspring sex ratio of <it>M. australica</it> with differing foundress numbers and examined combat between emerged males. The offspring sex ratios were extremely female biased and almost independent of foundress number in all cases. The population of <it>M. australica</it> used in the experiment was infected with the cytoplasmically inherited symbiotic bacterium <it>Wolbachia.</it> However, although <it>Wolbachia</it> is a potential sex-ratio distorter, noninfected individuals showed the same sex ratio patterns as the <it>Wolbachia</it>-infected individuals. An arena experiment showed that younger males were almost always killed by older males that had eclosed earlier. These results suggested that lethal male–male combat is an additional factor distorting the sex ratio toward a more female-biased sex ratio. This provides a new perspective on current local mate competition models.
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