Abstract

The foraging behaviour of Encarsia formosa was analyzed using a stochastic simulation model of the parasitoid's behaviour. Parasitoids were allowed to search during a day on a tomato plant infested with immatures of the greenhouse whitefly, Trialeurodes vaporariorum. The model simulates searching, host selection, host handling and patch leaving behaviour, and the physiological state of the parasitoid. The outputs of the model are the number of visited leaflets and the number of hosts encountered, parasitized or killed by host feeding. The simulation results agreed well with observations of parasitoids foraging on tomato plants. The number of encounters and ovipositions on the plant increased with host density according to a type II functional response. At a clustered host distribution over leaflets and low host densities, the most important parameters affecting the number of ovipositions were the leaf area, the parasitoid's walking speed and walking activity, the probability of oviposition after encountering a host, the initial egg load and the ratio of search times on both leaf sides. At high densities, the maximum egg load and the giving-up time on a leaflet since latest host encounter were the most essential parameters.

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