Abstract

Development of first instar larvae of Gonia cinerascens, which rest in the muscles of host caterpillars, is triggered by the release of the host's ecdysteroids when the juvenile hormone is absent. Ecdysteroids act on the parasitoid directly and at the same time induce physiological and biochemical changes in the host, which are indispensable for the parasitoid's development. These changes do not occur when metamorphosis of the host is suppressed with the juvenile hormone. Normally the parasitoids initiate development at the larval-pupal transformation of the host, but under experimental conditions, they do so whenever a high ecdysteroid titre is coupled with the proper internal environment in the host, that is in decapitated caterpillars, isolated host abdomens, and when implanted into host pupae. Activated parasitoids moult into the second instar and migrate to the exuvial space of the host; this migratory behaviour is also triggered by ecdysteroids and may be induced experimentally in the first instar parasitoids. Unknown clues direct the migrating parasitoids under the wings and appendages of the host pharate pupal stage. The second instar parasitoids, which anchor to the integument of the host pupae, apparently develop independently of the host's hormones: they can produce third instar larvae, pupae, and adult flies when cultured in vitro.

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