Abstract

The parasitic insect Xenos vesparum induces noticeable behavioral and physiological changes—e.g. castration—in its female host, the paper wasp Polistes dominula: parasitized putative workers avoid any colony task and desert the colony to survive in the nearby vegetation, like future queens and males do. In this long-term observational study, we describe the spectacular attraction of parasitized workers towards trumpet creeper bushes (Campsis radicans) in early-summer. Two thirds of all wasps that we sampled on these bushes were parasitized, whereas the parasite prevalence was much lower in our study area and most wasps sampled on other nearby flowering bushes were non-parasitized. First, we describe the occurrence and consistency of this phenomenon across different sites and years. Second, we evaluate the spatial behavior of parasitized wasps on C. radicans bushes, which includes site-fidelity, exploitation and defense of rich extra-floral nectaries on buds and calices. Third, we record two critical steps of the lifecycle of X. vesparum on C. radicans: the parasite’s mating and a summer release of parasitic larvae, that can infect larval stages of the host if transported to the host’s nest. In a nutshell, C. radicans bushes provide many benefits both to the parasite X. vesparum and to its host: they facilitate the parasite’s mating and bivoltine lifecycle, a phenomenon never described before for this parasite, while, at the same time, they provide the wasp host with shelter inside trumpet flowers and extrafloral gland secretions, thus likely enhancing host survival and making it a suitable vector for the infection.

Highlights

  • Social insects are prime targets of parasites that can find suitable conditions within insect colonies to spread [1]

  • If parasitized by X. vesparum, P. dominula workers do not participate in colony tasks, do not receive aggressions by nest-mates and behave instead like future queens, i.e. they desert the nest to form summer aggregations on selected vegetation nearby [5,6,7]

  • Two thirds of P. dominula workers collected on trumpet creepers in June-July were parasitized (i.e. 175 parasitized and 84 non-parasitized wasps), while both rose and jasmine bushes (R and J) were visited mainly by non-parasitized wasps (95%, 248 non-parasitized and 16 parasitized wasps)

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Summary

Introduction

Social insects are prime targets of parasites that can find suitable conditions within insect colonies to spread [1]. If parasitized by X. vesparum, P. dominula workers do not participate in colony tasks (e.g., they do not contribute to rearing siblings), do not receive aggressions by nest-mates and behave instead like future queens, i.e. they desert the nest to form summer aggregations on selected vegetation nearby [5,6,7] This is a striking unusual behavior in a model organism for social evolution [8], and a recent study has shown a significant shift in the expression of caste-related genes that is associated with parasitism [9]. They usually occur in August and September in Tuscany (i.e. late in the wasp colony cycle) and include putative workers that have deserted the colony in June and July (hereafter defined as “parasitized workers”), and castrated putative queens that emerged and departed from their colony in August [11]

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