Abstract

This paper aimed to evaluate the stimuli that orient Gryon gallardoi females to the eggs of Spartocera dentiventris and allow their discrimination. Using a four-arm olfactometer connected to four odor sources--S. dentiventris eggs; hexane washed eggs; tobacco leaves; and tobacco leaves with eggs--the arrestment of female parasitoids with previous oviposition experience and without was individually verified. The time of permanence in each odor field was registered for a period of 15 minutes. Host discrimination, regarding age and previous parasitism, was tested using arenas, where females were exposed for 30 minutes, individually, to egg groups with different treatments. To evaluate age discrimination, three groups of eggs, previously washed with hexane, were employed in the following conditions: one day-old eggs; one-day brushed with 12-days-old egg extract; 12-days-old eggs with extract of one day-old eggs; and control (washed eggs, one day-old). The same procedure was done using five and eight days-old eggs jointly with control. Age-dependent egg discrimination was verified exposing four egg groups in the following treatments: parasitized, parasitized and washed with hexane, not parasitized, and not parasitized with extract of parasitized eggs. Olfactometer tests showed that inexperienced females remained more time next to tobacco leaves when compared to experienced ones. Experienced females responded to odors that emanated from eggs. Egg extracts did not promote age discrimination; however, non parasitized eggs, with extract of parasitized eggs were partially avoided. The results obtained indicate that G. gallardoi females might modify their responses upon contact with host. This fact suggests learning occurs; however, the acceptance and discrimination of host may be influenced by a complex array of stimuli, difficult to evaluate in isolation.

Highlights

  • Finding a suitable host certainly represents an important challenge to parasitoids, small sized organisms in a structurally complex environment

  • The insects utilized were obtained from an experimental plot of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum Linnaeus, 1753), reared from S. dentiventris adults of the colonizing generation

  • Females were individually caged when the first egg groups were registered in the tobacco plants, in order to obtain egg groups of known age (Wiedenmann et al, 2003)

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Summary

Introduction

Finding a suitable host certainly represents an important challenge to parasitoids, small sized organisms in a structurally complex environment. Along their evolutionary history, parasitoids have developed searching abilities relying on physical and/or chemicals cues (Nufio and Papaj, 2001). The chemical stimuli may arise from several sources: the host habitat, the host itself or from the interaction of both. The physical stimuli perceived through sight, hearing, and touch are originated from the host (i.e. size, color, texture, toughness, movements, sounds, etc). Those stimuli, associated or not, may be important in location, selection and host acceptance (Vinson, 1998). The answers to the various stimuli gave rise to a great diversity of behaviors (Harris and Foster, 1995), important either to maintain the natural diversity of communities and/or to regulate insect populations (Quicke, 1997)

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