Abstract

Abstract Certain ichneumonid parasitoids (Hymenoptera) use self‐produced vibrations transmitted on plant substrate, so‐called vibrational sounding, to locate their immobile concealed pupal hosts. An ambient temperature dependency with higher frequencies and intensities at higher temperatures is postulated because signals are of myogenic origin. Here, temperature influence on vibratory signals is analysed in the temperate parasitoid Pimpla turionellae under different thermal conditions using plant‐stem models to elicit host‐searching behaviour. Signals are measured with laser Doppler vibrometry and analysed for time parameters and frequency components applying fast‐Fourier transformations. The results reveal an unexpected effect of ambient temperature on signals produced by the female wasps. Although average values of time parameters (pulse trains, pulse train periods, inter pulse duration) are unchanged by ambient temperature, the frequency parameters show an inverse thermal effect. Within the temperature range tested (8–26 °C), decreasing temperature leads to significantly higher frequency and intensity of the self‐produced vibrations in the temperate species. This inverse thermal effect may be explained by a temperature‐coupled signal production in the frequency domain to compensate negative low‐temperature effects on the mechanoreceptors by increased muscle activity. The option of heterothermy to produce signals reliably during vibrational sounding under low temperature is also discussed.

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