Abstract

Microhabitat preferences of four parasitoids (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) of house fly pupae were measured in a two-dimensional arena containing perpendicular light and moisture gradients. Parasitism by Muscidifurax raptorand Nasonia vitripenniswas greatest in dry substrates, with the latter preferring bright illumination and the former tending to prefer dark. Urolepis rufipesselected bright illumination and moist substrates, attacking the most hosts at bright-moist and dim-moist microhabitats. Spalangia cameroniexhibited no main-effect preference for light intensity or moisture, although parasitism was highest at dim-moist, dark-wet, and dark-moist microhabitats. These results demonstrate that simple abiotic attributes, such as light intensity and substrate moisture concentration, are important in defining some dimensions of the niches of these parasitoids.

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