Bernal Julio S, Luck Robert F, Morse J G
Department of Entomology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA, , , , , , US.
Oecologia. 1998 Oct;116(4):510-518. doi: 10.1007/s004420050616.
We tested several assumptions and predictions of host-quality-dependent sex allocation theory (Charnov et al. 1981) with data obtained for the parasitoid Metaphycus stanleyi Compere on its host, brown soft scale (Coccus hesperidum L.), in a California citrus grove and in the laboratory. Scales ceased growing after parasitization by M. stanleyi. Thus, M. stanleyi may gauge host quality (=size) at oviposition. Host size positively influenced adult parasitoid size, and parasitoid size in turn influenced adult longevity of M. stanleyi. However, parasitoid fitness gains with host size and adult size were similar in males versus females. Sex allocation to individual hosts by M. stanleyi depended on host size; females consistently emerged from larger hosts than males. Host size was important in a relative sense; the mean host sizes of females versus males, and of solitary versus gregarious parasitoids varied with the available host size distribution. The offspring sex ratio of M. stanleyi reflected the available host size distribution; the sex ratio of emerging parasitoids varied with the available host size distribution. We did not detect a "critical host size" below which males emerged, and above which females emerged; rather, only females emerged from hosts in the upper size range, and a variable ratio of males and females emerged from hosts in the lower size range. We conclude that the sex ratio of field populations of M. stanleyi is driven largely by the available size distribution of C. hesperidum. In addition, we tested predictions resulting from theoretical analyses of sex allocation in autoparasitoids with data obtained on Coccophagus semicircularis (Förster) parasitizing brown soft scale in the field. The sex ratio of C. semicircularis was consistently and strongly female biased (ca. 90% females). Based on available theoretical analyses, we suggest that this sex ratio pattern may have resulted from a very low encounter rate of secondary hosts coupled with a strong time limitation in C. semicircularis females. This explanation was the most plausible given constraints stemming from the detection of secondary hosts, their variable location within primary hosts, and their handling times. Finally, the size of hosts which yielded single versus multiple parasitoids, and the sizes of these parasitoids, were compared. These comparisons suggested that: (1) M. stanleyi females gauge host sizes precisely, and in terms of female offspring; thus a fitness penalty is not incurred by females which share a host, while males benefit from sharing a host, and; (2) instances where multiple C. semicircularis emerged from a single host were probably the result of parasitism by different females, or during different encounters by a single female.
我们利用在加利福尼亚柑橘园及实验室中获得的寄生蜂斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽(Metaphycus stanleyi Compere)寄生于其寄主褐软蚧(Coccus hesperidum L.)的数据,对寄主质量依赖性性别分配理论(Charnov等人,1981年)的若干假设和预测进行了检验。被斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽寄生后,蚧虫停止生长。因此,斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽可能在产卵时评估寄主质量(=大小)。寄主大小对成年寄生蜂大小有正向影响,而寄生蜂大小又反过来影响斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽的成年寿命。然而,雄性和雌性寄生蜂随寄主大小和成虫大小获得的适合度收益相似。斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽对单个寄主的性别分配取决于寄主大小;从较大寄主中羽化出的雌性寄生蜂始终多于雄性。寄主大小在相对意义上很重要;雌性与雄性、单寄生与聚寄生的寄生蜂的平均寄主大小随可用寄主大小分布而变化。斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽的后代性别比反映了可用寄主大小分布;羽化出的寄生蜂的性别比随可用寄主大小分布而变化。我们未检测到存在一个“临界寄主大小”,低于此大小羽化出雄性,高于此大小羽化出雌性;相反,仅在较大尺寸范围内的寄主中羽化出雌性,而在较小尺寸范围内的寄主中羽化出的雄性和雌性比例可变。我们得出结论,斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽野外种群的性别比很大程度上由褐软蚧的可用大小分布驱动。此外,我们利用在野外寄生于褐软蚧的半圆食蚧蚜小蜂(Coccophagus semicircularis (Förster))的数据,检验了对自寄生蜂性别分配进行理论分析得出的预测。半圆食蚧蚜小蜂的性别比始终强烈偏向雌性(约90%为雌性)。基于现有的理论分析,我们认为这种性别比模式可能是由于次生寄主的相遇率极低,再加上半圆食蚧蚜小蜂雌性存在强烈的时间限制所致。鉴于在检测次生寄主、它们在初级寄主内的可变位置以及处理时间方面存在的限制,这一解释最为合理。最后,比较了产生单头与多头寄生蜂的寄主大小以及这些寄生蜂的大小。这些比较表明:(1)斯坦利氏后丽盲蝽雌性能够精确评估寄主大小,且是从雌性后代的角度;因此,共享一个寄主的雌性不会遭受适合度损失,而雄性则从共享寄主中受益;(2)单个寄主中出现多头半圆食蚧蚜小蜂的情况可能是不同雌性寄生或同一雌性在不同遭遇中寄生的结果。