Growth rate adjustment of two Drosophila parasitoids in response to the developmental stage of hosts

1. Generalist koinobiont parasitoids often exhibit high flexibility in their development; their larvae shorten or prolong the developmental period depending on the host quality at parasitisation. However, flexibility of the growth rate of parasitoid larvae has rarely been investigated so far. 2. Thi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological entomology 2017-12, Vol.42 (6), p.785-792
Hauptverfasser: KOHYAMA, TETSUO I., ONIZAWA, KOTA, KIMURA, MASAHITO T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:1. Generalist koinobiont parasitoids often exhibit high flexibility in their development; their larvae shorten or prolong the developmental period depending on the host quality at parasitisation. However, flexibility of the growth rate of parasitoid larvae has rarely been investigated so far. 2. This study investigated how the koinobiont parasitoid wasps Asobara japonica and Leptopilina ryukyuensis regulate their larval growth when they parasitise host Drosophila larvae with varying larval periods. 3. In both parasitoid species, the preimaginal period was longer when they parasitised 1‐day‐old larvae of Drosophila rufa than when they parasitised older larvae of D. rufa or when they parasitised larvae of Drosophila simulans, a species with a shorter larval period than D. rufa. After host pupariation, A. japonica accelerated its growth, thereby showing a biphasic growth curve. On the other hand, L. ryukyuensis did not accelerate its growth after host pupariation. 4. Growth retardation of parasitoid larvae in 1‐day‐old D. rufa larvae would contribute to avoiding excess growth before host pupariation, because the excess growth of parasitoid larvae would have negative effects on host growth. The growth rate acceleration of A. japonica after host pupariation suggests that they enhance resource utilisation in a host that has reached maximum body mass. It remains uncertain as to why L. ryukuensis does not show clear accelerated growth after host pupariation. Nonetheless, these results suggest that parasitoid larvae have the ability to detect the developmental stage of hosts in a species‐specific manner. Koinobiont parasitoids that allow hosts to develop continuously after parasitisation exhibit high flexibility in their development in order to consume host resources efficiently. The present study revealed that two koinobiont Drosophila parasitoids adjusted their larval growth rate in response to host conditions, i.e. they retarded their own development when they parasitised young or slowly developing host larvae. After host pupariation, one of these parasitoids accelerated development, whereas the other did not. This difference might reflect species‐specific strategies of host resource use.
ISSN:0307-6946
1365-2311
DOI:10.1111/een.12444