Abstract
Understanding the response of egg parasitoids to host density is essential for efficient biological control. However, this response has been little investigated in parasitoids that attack eggs of insect pests that transmit plant pathogens in a persistent-propagative mode. The objective of the present study was to investigate the response of two egg parasitoid communities to high and low densities of eggs of the corn leafhopper Dalbulus maidis, an efficient vector of maize plant pathogens. Five and ten two-week-old female D. maidis (for the low-density and high-density groups, respectively) were allowed to oviposit on landrace maize leaves. The maize plants with the eggs were then transported to a seasonal and a year-round maize habitat in central Mexico, where they were exposed to naturally occurring parasitoids. In total, four treatments were conducted: seasonal maize habitat/low egg density (SL), seasonal maize habitat/high egg density (SH), year-round maize habitat/low egg density (YL), and year-round maize habitat/high egg density (YH). The parasitoids emerging from the eggs included the Mymaridae Anagrus virlai and Anagrus incarnatus, and the Trichogrammatidae Paracentrobia sp., Pseudoligosita sp., and Oligosita sp., with A. virlai as the most abundant species. An inverse density-dependent relationship was found between the number of D. maidis eggs and the rate of parasitism in the SH group. In the SL, YL, and YH groups, an independent relationship was seen between the number of eggs and the parasitism rate. These results suggest that high vs. low egg density affects the density-dependence relationships between egg parasitoids and their hosts.
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