Abstract

Hyposoter didymator (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae) is a generalist solitary endoparasitoid of noctuid larvae. In the present work, we tested whether populations of H. didymator were divided in several genetically distinct taxa as described for many other generalist parasitoid species, and whether differences in H. didymator parasitism rates were explained by the insect host species and/or by the plant on which these hosts were feeding on. The genetic analysis of natural populations collected in different regions in France and Spain on seven different insect hosts and seven different host plants (775 individuals) showed that H. didymator populations belong to a unique single taxon. However, H. didymator seems to be somewhat specialized. Indeed, in the fields it more often parasitized Helicoverpa armigera compared to the other host species collected in the present work. Also, H. didymator parasitism rates in field conditions and semi-field experimental studies were dependent on the host plants on which H. armigera larvae are feeding. Still, H. didymator can occur occasionally on non-preferred noctuid species. One hypothesis explaining the ability of H. didymator to switch hosts in natura could be related to fluctuating densities of the preferred host over the year; this strategy would allow the parasitoid to avoid seasonal population collapses.

Highlights

  • Hyposoter didymator is currently described in the literature as a generalist parasitoid able to infest the larvae of several noctuid species in nature and to develop indifferently in a range of noctuid hosts in laboratory conditions

  • We show that, at least in western Europe (France and Spain) and on the 7 insect hosts collected in this work, H. didymator populations are not subdivided in several genetically differentiated taxa but rather belong to a unique single taxon

  • Cryptic species have been identified among braconid species parasitizing lepidopteran [e.g., Cotesia melitaearum and C. acuminata (Kankare et al, 2005) and Cotesia flavipes complex (Muirhead et al, 2012)] or aphids [e.g., Aphelinus varipes species complex

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Summary

Introduction

Free-living when they are adults, they complete their larval development within the body of another insect eventually killing it. Because of their particular lifestyle, they have intricate physiological interactions with their hosts that allow them to optimally exploit host resources (Harvey, 2005). There is a continuum in amplitude of host ranges within endoparasitoids, some being highly specialized (e.g., Hyposoter horticola; Lei and Hanski, 1998) and others reported as generalists (e.g., Cotesia marginiventris; Tamò et al, 2006). Generalists can exploit a broad range of hosts, and because of their ability to shift to another host when one host population is at low density, they should have

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