van Nouhuys Saskya, Kaartinen Riikka
Metapopulation Research Group, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, PO Box 65, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
Proc Biol Sci. 2008 Feb 22;275(1633):377-85. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.1446.
Social insects and insects that provision nests are well known to have complex foraging behaviour involving repeated visits to learned locations. Other insects do not forage from a central location and are generally assumed to respond to resources by simple attraction without spatial memory. This simple response to resource cues is generally taken as giving rise to patterns of resource use that correspond directly to resource distribution. By contrast, the solitary parasitoid wasp Hyposoter horticola monitors the locations of multiple potential hosts (butterfly eggs) for up to several weeks, until the hosts become susceptible to parasitism. Essentially all hosts in the landscape are found, and one-third of them are parasitized, independent of host density. Here, we show that the wasps do not relocate hosts using odour markers previously left by themselves or other foragers, nor do they find the eggs anew repeatedly. Instead, the wasps relocate host eggs by learning the position of the eggs relative to visual landmarks. The anticipatory foraging behaviour presented here is a key to the wasp's exceptionally stable population dynamics.
众所周知,群居昆虫和会为巢穴储备食物的昆虫具有复杂的觅食行为,包括多次前往记忆中的地点。其他昆虫并非从一个中心位置觅食,通常认为它们是通过简单的吸引来对资源做出反应,而没有空间记忆。对资源线索的这种简单反应通常被认为会产生与资源分布直接对应的资源利用模式。相比之下,独居寄生蜂园艺长尾小蜂会监测多个潜在宿主(蝴蝶卵)的位置长达数周,直到宿主易受寄生。基本上能找到该区域内的所有宿主,其中三分之一会被寄生,这与宿主密度无关。在这里,我们表明,黄蜂不会利用自己或其他觅食者之前留下的气味标记来重新定位宿主,也不会反复重新找到卵。相反,黄蜂通过学习卵相对于视觉地标物的位置来重新定位宿主卵。这里呈现的预期性觅食行为是黄蜂种群动态异常稳定的关键。