Abstract
Abstract. We test the hypothesis that a solitary parasitoid wasp may gain in fitness if she lays more eggs in a host. Using heterospecific superparasitism (=multiparasitism) between the solitary aphid parasitoids, Aphidius smithi Sharma & Subba Rao and Ephedrus californicus Baker, we show that (i) a superparasitizing female's chance that her offspring will survive competition is an increasing function of egg density, and (ii) survival among same‐aged larvae is independent of the oviposition sequence. These findings on asymmetric larval competition provide indirect evidence that supports two fundamental, but untested, assumptions underlying models of adaptive superparasitism between conspecific wasps.
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