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学习对寄生蜂有害。

Learning can be detrimental for a parasitic wasp.

机构信息

Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie, Alimentari e Ambientali, Università degli Studi di Perugia, Perugia, Italy.

Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali, Università degli Studi di Palermo, Palermo, Italy.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2021 Mar 23;16(3):e0238336. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0238336. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Animals have evolved the capacity to learn, and the conventional view is that learning allows individuals to improve foraging decisions. The parasitoid Telenomus podisi has been shown to parasitize eggs of the exotic stink bug Halyomorpha halys at the same rate as eggs of its coevolved host, Podisus maculiventris, but the parasitoid cannot complete its development in the exotic species. We hypothesized that T. podisi learns to exploit cues from this non-coevolved species, thereby increasing unsuccessful parasitism rates. We conducted bioassays to compare the responses of naïve vs. experienced parasitoids on chemical footprints left by one of the two host species. Both naïve and experienced females showed a higher response to footprints of P. maculiventris than of H. halys. Furthermore, parasitoids that gained an experience on H. halys significantly increased their residence time within the arena and the frequency of re-encounter with the area contaminated by chemical cues. Hence, our study describes detrimental learning where a parasitoid learns to associate chemical cues from an unsuitable host, potentially re-enforcing a reproductive cul-de-sac (evolutionary trap). Maladaptive learning in the T. podisi-H. halys association could have consequences for population dynamics of sympatric native and exotic host species.

摘要

动物已经进化出学习的能力,传统观点认为,学习可以使个体改善觅食决策。寄生蜂 Telenomus podisi 已被证明会以与共生宿主 Podisus maculiventris 相同的速度寄生外来臭虫 Halyomorpha halys 的卵,但该寄生蜂无法在该外来物种中完成其发育。我们假设 T. podisi 学会利用来自这种非共生物种的线索,从而提高不成功的寄生率。我们进行了生物测定,比较了未经验证和经验丰富的寄生蜂对两种宿主物种之一留下的化学足迹的反应。未经验证和经验丰富的雌性对 P. maculiventris 的足迹都比对 H. halys 的足迹表现出更高的反应。此外,在 H. halys 上获得经验的寄生蜂在竞技场中的停留时间和与受化学线索污染的区域再次相遇的频率显著增加。因此,我们的研究描述了有害学习,即寄生蜂学会将不适合的宿主的化学线索联系起来,这可能会加强生殖死胡同(进化陷阱)。T. podisi-H. halys 共生关系中的适应性学习可能会对同域的本地和外来宿主物种的种群动态产生影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7160/7987188/89e2f9a5eadb/pone.0238336.g001.jpg

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