Abstract

Chemical compounds (infochemicals or semiochemicals) play an important role both in intra-specific and inter-specific communication. For example, chemical cues appear to play a key role in the host selection process adopted by insect parasitoids. In recent years significant advances have been made in order to understand the chemical ecology of insect parasitoids. However, little information is available about the evolution of semiochemical use in the host location process of insect parasitoids. Here we investigated the strategy adopted by seven closely related parasitoid species in the genus Melittobia when foraging for four different suitable hosts. By using an integrated approach that combined olfactometer bioassays and phylogenetic investigations, we found that: 1) exploitation of host-derived semiochemicals is widespread in the Melittobia genus; 2) there is specificity of attraction towards the different host species tested; in particular, the early-branching species in the Melittobia genus are attracted to odors associated with leaf cutting bees (Megachile rotundata) whereas the most-diverged species are attracted to odors associated with solitary mud dauber wasps (Trypoxyilon politum). Regardless of the phylogenetic relationships, no Melittobia species exhibited attraction towards odors of factitious laboratory hosts (i.e. the flesh fly Sarcophaga bullata). Interestingly, five Melittobia species are also attracted by odors associated with honeybees hosts which indicate that these parasitoids could be potential pests of honeybees. Our study shed light on the host location within the Melittobia genus and represents a first attempt to understand semiochemical use in an evolutionary perspective in the context of parasitoids’ foraging behavior.

Highlights

  • Semiochemicals are important sources of information that mediate ecological interactions in organisms at different degree of evolution across microorganisms, plants, arthropods, and vertebrates (Hildebrand, 1995; Carde and Millar, 2004)

  • In this study we show that macropterous females of Melittobia species clearly rely on semiochemical exploitation of host-associated cues when searching for hosts

  • The early-branching species were attracted to volatiles released from the alfalfa leaf-cutter bee M. rotundata and A. mellifera, suggesting that these bee odors could be related to those emitted by the ancestral original host attacked by Melittobia wasps

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Summary

Introduction

Semiochemicals are important sources of information that mediate ecological interactions in organisms at different degree of evolution across microorganisms, plants, arthropods, and vertebrates (Hildebrand, 1995; Carde and Millar, 2004). Semiochemical Exploitation by Melittobia Parasitoids semiochemicals can be exploited to find and choose a mate, to mark the territory, for kinship recognition or to inform others of danger. Semiochemicals can be used by natural enemies to locate preys/hosts and are widely exploited by parasitoids, i.e., insects whose eggs and larvae develop inside the body of other arthropods whereas the adult is free-living (Godfray, 1994; Fatouros et al, 2008; Colazza et al, 2014). Natural selection is expected to act strongly on parasitoids’ host finding efficiency (Vet, 2001). Species that display high host finding efficiency may have an advantage when competing with antagonistic parasitoid species that are searching in the same habitat, especially if hosts are scarce (Harvey et al, 2013; Cusumano et al, 2016)

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