Semiochemically mediated foraging behavior in beneficial parasitic insects
Author(s)
Tumlinson, James H
Lewis, W Joe
Date issued
1993
In
Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
Vol
3-4
No
22
From page
385
To page
391
Subjects
PARASITOID PLANT-INSECT INTERACTIONS LEARNING BIOLOGICAL CONTROL COTESIA-MARGINIVENTRIS CRESSON PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTIONS AIRBORNE SEMIOCHEMICALS PLANT ALLELOCHEMICALS IDENTIFICATION MICROHABITAT ODORS HOSTS
Abstract
Chemical cues enable female parasitic wasps to locate the eggs, larvae, or other life stages of the insects in or on which they place their eggs. These chemical signals, or semiochemicals, may be produced by the hosts and/or by the plants on which the hosts feed. The composition of the chemical signal often differs with different species of hosts or with different plants. New evidence suggests that the wasps exploit semiochemicals emitted by plants in response to insect herbivore feeding. The wasps learn to respond to the different blends of chemicals that indicate the location of their hosts and they can be trained to respond to a specific odor blend. Thus, it may be possible to increase their effectiveness for biological control by conditioning them, prior to their release, to search for a target pest in a particular crop.
Publication type
journal article
