ISSN:
1570-7458
Keywords:
host finding
;
host recognition
;
kairomone
;
Eulophidae
;
Diprionidae
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Abstract The chalcidoid wasp Dahlbominus fuscipennis Zett. (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) parasitises pupae of the European spruce sawfly Gilpinia hercyniae Htg. (Hymenoptera: Diprionidae). In this parasitoid-host system the role of infochemicals for successful parasitisation was studied. Olfactometer experiments and dual choice bioassays in petri dishes showed that D. fuscipennis was not attracted by volatiles from a plant-host complex consisting of spruce, sawfly larvae and pupae. On the other hand, odours from needles of Picea abies (L.), that were collected from the ground, attracted D. fuscipennis to the habitat of the sawfly. Volatiles from host pupae were not attractive, whereas a contact kairomone from sawfly pupae elicited frequent antennal drumming, a behaviour that indicates host recognition. This contact kairomone was extracted with methanol from the outer cocoon layer of the pupa. The kairomone is not produced by the silk glands of the last instar larva spinning the cocoon, since a methanolic extract of silk gland secretion did not elicit any response in D. fuscipennis. Further bioassays revealed that non-volatile components of the integument of the prepupa within the cocoon also elicited antennal drumming. We suggest that chemicals of the prepupal integument diffuse from inside the cocoon to the outside where they inform the parasitoid on the suitability of the host.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1003171418581
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