Abstract

AbstractPlant morphological characters can affect the foraging abilities of natural enemies. Heavy wax blooms have been shown to impede predators searching for herbivores on various species in the genus Brassica (Brassicaceae). This study determined whether epicuticular wax affected the foraging behavior of the braconid wasp Diaeratiella rapae (M’Intosh) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) as it searched for its aphid host Brevicoryne brassicae L. (Homoptera: Aphididae) on the leaves of cauliflower varieties with heavy or light wax blooms. Wasps on the variety with a heavier wax bloom foraged more slowly, groomed more often and for longer periods of time, fell from the leaves more often, took longer to find colonies of aphids, and attacked them at a lower rate than wasps foraging on the variety with a lighter wax bloom. When epicuticular wax was removed from the leaves, the wasp's foraging efficiency and efficacy improved significantly on the cauliflower variety with a heavy wax bloom. The amount of epicuticular wax present on a leaf was shown to impede the ability of a parasitoid to forage, locate, and attack its host.

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