Abstract
The foraging behavior ofVenturia canescens, a solitary endoparasitoid of lepidopteran larvae, was investigated in the laboratory. Females with a greater number of mature eggs in their ovarioles and oviducts parasitized a greater number of hosts and won a greater proportion of encounters with other searching females. Wasps which had been exposed to hosts prior to an experimental trial lost a higher proportion ofagonistic encounters with conspecifics than wasps which had no prior exposure to hosts. The behavior of a wasp at the time of the encounter influenced the outcome of the encounter. Wasps involved in active search of the host medium with the ovipositor (“probing”) were more likely to win encounters than wasps in any other behavioral category. In a situation where the agonistic encounter was between two probing wasps, both contestants were equally likely to win. Results are discussed in the light of the idea that mutual interference arises, in this species, as a result of agonistic encounters between searching females and recent dynamic-programming models which suggest that parasitoid oviposition should be influenced by mature egg load.
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Hughes, J.P., Harvey, I.F. & Hubbard, S.F. Host-searching behavior ofVenturia canescens (Grav.) (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae): Interference—the effect of mature egg load and prior behavior. J Insect Behav 7, 433–454 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02025442
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02025442