Abstract
AbstractIn animals, restlessness is a strategy to fulfil a goal within a narrow seasonal window when ecological and physiological constraints require the performance of certain fundamental events. Although restlessness can be expected in parasitic species that have their biological cycle similar to that of the host, no ‘urge to parasitize’ has thus far been demonstrated in any host‐parasite pair. The paper wasp, Polistes sulcifer, is a social parasite that has lost the nest‐building ability and marked by the absence of the worker caste; it depends on a congeneric host species to reproduce. Host colony usurpation is successful when it occurs in a well‐defined seasonal window. The short time available for host‐nest usurpation might lead to parasite restlessness that overlaps this period. Under controlled laboratory conditions, we demonstrated that the parasite females exhibit ‘usurpation restlessness’ during the period in which field usurpations occur. Additional experiments showed that both this period and laboratory temperature influence the parasite’s ‘urge to usurp’.
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