Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis

Abstract In variable environments, sampling information on habitat quality is essential for making adaptive foraging decisions. In insect parasitoids, females foraging for hosts have repeatedly been shown to employ behavioral strategies that are in line with predictions from optimal foraging models....

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Main Authors: Mareike Koppik, Andra Thiel, Thomas S. Hoffmeister
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-12-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5838
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author Mareike Koppik
Andra Thiel
Thomas S. Hoffmeister
author_facet Mareike Koppik
Andra Thiel
Thomas S. Hoffmeister
author_sort Mareike Koppik
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In variable environments, sampling information on habitat quality is essential for making adaptive foraging decisions. In insect parasitoids, females foraging for hosts have repeatedly been shown to employ behavioral strategies that are in line with predictions from optimal foraging models. Yet, which cues exactly are employed to sample information on habitat quality has rarely been investigated. Using the gregarious parasitoid Nasonia vitripennis (Walker; Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae), we provided females with different cues about hosts to elucidate, which of them would change a wasp's posterior behavior suggesting a change in information status. We employed posterior clutch size decisions on a host as proxy for a female's estimation of habitat quality. Taking into account changes in physiological state of the foraging parasitoid, we tested whether different host qualities encountered previously change the subsequent clutch size decision in females. Additionally, we investigated whether other kinds of positive experiences—such as ample time to investigate hosts, host feeding, or egg laying—would increase a wasp's estimated value of habitat quality. Contrary to our expectations, quality differences in previously encountered hosts did not affect clutch size decisions. However, we found that prior egg laying experience changes posterior egg allocation to a host, indicating a change in female information status. Host feeding and the time available for host inspection, though correlated with egg laying experience, did not seem to contribute to this change in information status.
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spelling doaj.art-56d14419af04445f986c0653338496962022-12-21T22:10:41ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582019-12-01924140151402210.1002/ece3.5838Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennisMareike Koppik0Andra Thiel1Thomas S. Hoffmeister2Institute of Ecology University of Bremen Bremen GermanyInstitute of Ecology University of Bremen Bremen GermanyInstitute of Ecology University of Bremen Bremen GermanyAbstract In variable environments, sampling information on habitat quality is essential for making adaptive foraging decisions. In insect parasitoids, females foraging for hosts have repeatedly been shown to employ behavioral strategies that are in line with predictions from optimal foraging models. Yet, which cues exactly are employed to sample information on habitat quality has rarely been investigated. Using the gregarious parasitoid Nasonia vitripennis (Walker; Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae), we provided females with different cues about hosts to elucidate, which of them would change a wasp's posterior behavior suggesting a change in information status. We employed posterior clutch size decisions on a host as proxy for a female's estimation of habitat quality. Taking into account changes in physiological state of the foraging parasitoid, we tested whether different host qualities encountered previously change the subsequent clutch size decision in females. Additionally, we investigated whether other kinds of positive experiences—such as ample time to investigate hosts, host feeding, or egg laying—would increase a wasp's estimated value of habitat quality. Contrary to our expectations, quality differences in previously encountered hosts did not affect clutch size decisions. However, we found that prior egg laying experience changes posterior egg allocation to a host, indicating a change in female information status. Host feeding and the time available for host inspection, though correlated with egg laying experience, did not seem to contribute to this change in information status.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5838decision‐makingegg laying decisionegg loadinformation use
spellingShingle Mareike Koppik
Andra Thiel
Thomas S. Hoffmeister
Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis
Ecology and Evolution
decision‐making
egg laying decision
egg load
information use
title Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis
title_full Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis
title_fullStr Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis
title_full_unstemmed Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis
title_short Egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis
title_sort egg laying rather than host quality or host feeding experience drives habitat estimation in the parasitic wasp nasonia vitripennis
topic decision‐making
egg laying decision
egg load
information use
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5838
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AT andrathiel egglayingratherthanhostqualityorhostfeedingexperiencedriveshabitatestimationintheparasiticwaspnasoniavitripennis
AT thomasshoffmeister egglayingratherthanhostqualityorhostfeedingexperiencedriveshabitatestimationintheparasiticwaspnasoniavitripennis