Abstract

The foraging strategies for both food or hosts of three trichogrammatid species: Trichogramma evanescens, Trichogramma cacoecia and Trichogramma dendrolimi were compared using artificial patches of Sitotroga cerealella eggs. In all experiments, inexperienced and newly emerged wasps of < 1 h old were singly tested. When the females were allowed to land upon the hosts, the decision‐making process for initial acceptance or rejection was species‐dependent. The initial search in T. evanescens was for food, whereas T. dendrolimi or T. cacoeciae start to oviposit immediately after their emergence. When honey‐deprived or undeprived females were each exposed to single patches for 20 or 60 min, variations in mean number of probing females ‘drilling and ovipositing’ were also species‐dependent. Acceptance of host eggs by honey‐deprived females and subsequent egg deposition were higher in both T. cacoeciae and T. dendrolimi than in T. evanescens. For all species, the probing of honey‐undeprived females was higher than that of deprived ones. When the exposure period was prolonged to 24 or 48 h and the number of patches per female increased to three, most of the honey‐deprived or undeprived T. evanescens females attacked one patch, and only a few of them attacked two patches. Foraging activity of honey‐deprived females of T. cacoeciae was restricted to single patches, whereas most undeprived ones attacked more than one patch. In contrast, honey‐deprived or undeprived T. dendrolimi females attacked more than one patch. The experiments showed that T. dendrolimi females have more powerful ovipositing urges than looking for food and that the opposite was the case for T. evanescens, with T. cacoeciae being intermediate.

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