Repository logo
Research Data
Publications
Projects
Persons
Organizations
English
Français
Log In(current)
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Article de recherche (journal article)
  4. A comparison of naïve and conditioned responses of three generalist endoparasitoids of lepidopteran larvae to host-induced plant odours

A comparison of naïve and conditioned responses of three generalist endoparasitoids of lepidopteran larvae to host-induced plant odours

Author(s)
Tamò, Cristina
Ricard, Ingrid
Held, Matthias  
PRN Biologie  
Davison, A. C.
Turlings, Ted  
Laboratoire de recherches fondamentales et appliquées en écologie chimique  
Date issued
2006
In
Animal Biology, 2006/56/205-220
Subjects
Associative learning herbivore-induced plant odours hostfinding parasitoids
Abstract
Many parasitic wasps that exploit herbivores as their hosts make use of herbivoreinduced plant odours to locate their victims and these wasps often exhibit an ability to learn to associate specific plant-produced odours with the presence of hosts. This associative learning is expected to allow generalist parasitoids to focus on cues that are most reliably associated with current host presence, but evidence supporting this hypothesis is ambiguous. Using a six-arm olfactometer we compared the responses of three generalist larval endoparasitoids, <i>Cotesia marginiventris</i> (Hymenoptera: Braconidae), <i>Microplitis rufiventris</i> (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) and <i>Campoletis sonorensis</i> (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), to the induced odours of three plant species: maize (<i>Zea mays</i>), cowpea (<i>Vigna unguiculata</i>), and cotton (<i>Gossypium hirsutum</i>). We tested the responses of naïve females as well as of females that were first conditioned by parasitising host larvae feeding on one of the plant species. Despite similarities in biology and host range the three wasp species responded entirely differently. Naïve <i>C. marginiventris</i> and <i>C. sonorensis</i> chose equally among the induced odours of the three plants, whereas naïve <i>M. rufiventris</i>, which may have a somewhat more restricted host range, tended to prefer the odour of maize. After conditioning, most C. marginiventris females chose the odour of the plant species that they had experienced, but conditioned M. rufiventris showed an even stronger preference for maize odours, independently of the plant they had experienced. <i>Cotesia sonorensis</i> did not show any change in its preference after conditioning. We speculate that its extremely broad host range allows <i>C. sonorensis</i> females to use fixed responses to cues commonly associated with plants damaged by Lepidoptera. These results imply that different generalist parasitoids may employ different foraging strategies and that associative learning is not necessarily part of it.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/58991
DOI
10.1163/157075606777304177
File(s)
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Download
Name

Tamo_Cristina_-_A_comparison_of_na_ve_and_conditioned_responses_20060721.pdf

Type

Main Article

Size

501.52 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Université de Neuchâtel logo

Service information scientifique & bibliothèques

Rue Emile-Argand 11

2000 Neuchâtel

contact.libra@unine.ch

Service informatique et télématique

Rue Emile-Argand 11

Bâtiment B, rez-de-chaussée

Powered by DSpace-CRIS

libra v2.2.0

© 2026 Université de Neuchâtel

Portal overviewUser guideOpen Access strategyOpen Access directive Research at UniNE Open Access ORCIDWhat's new