Competition and Cooperation Among Parasitic Hymenoptera Related to Biological Control

1965 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 409-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. E. Flanders

Abstract Since the earliest days of this century the interactions of parasitic Hymenoptera that attack the same host species have been reported from time to time in connection with studies on the natural enemy fauna of pest insects. These studies indicate that the synchronous attack by two or more parasitic species on an individual of a host population, multiple parasitism, is of little, if any, importance in the economy of that population, whereas the attack by two or more parasitic species on a sequence of a host’s developmental stages and instars, sequential parasitism, may be highly important, especially from the standpoint of host regulation. Since the host-regulating capacity of a parasite species may vary both seasonally and geographically, sequential parasitism is highly conducive to continuity in the conservation of the host’s food supply, the practical measure of regulative parasitism. The cooperative as well as the competitive aspects of sequential parasitism are discussed. The parasite fauna of the black scale, Saissetia oleae (Bernard), is used to exemplify these aspects of parasitism.

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Μ. V. Macropodi

The time of year the adults (flight period) of the parasitoids of S. oleae: Μetaphycus helvolus, Μetaphycus lounsburyi, Scutelista cyanea and Moranila californica and the predator Chilocorus bipustulatus are present, was determined in three areas of Corfu island: Lima, Kontocali and Avliotes. M. helvolus apparently has two flight periods: the first is from A­pril till July and the second from November till December. All the other natural enemies have only one flight period per year. The flight period of M. lounsburyi is from April till August, while S. cyanea flies from August till the end of September or the first days of Oc­tober, and M. californica adults are present from July till the middle of December. Adults of C. bipustulatus appeared from July till December or the middle of January.


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 242-244
Author(s):  
Marcus Alvarenga Soares ◽  
Maria do Céu Monteiro Da Cruz ◽  
Larissa Madureira Martins ◽  
Raoni Pereira De Carvalho ◽  
Evaldo Martins Pires ◽  
...  

Plantas de oliveira Olea europaea L. (Oleaceae) foram introduzidas no município de Diamantina, Minas Gerais, Brasil devido ao potencial local para produzir azeitonas e azeite, fruto e processado com mercado mundial em expansão. O objetivo deste trabalho foi registrar, pela primeira vez, a presença da cochonilha negra, Saissetia oleae (Olivier) (Hemiptera: Coccidae), em oliveiras (cv. Ascolano) em Diamantina. O presente registro mostra que S. oleae precisa ser monitorada, quando da implantação de viveiros de mudas e áreas de cultivo nesta região, por ter potencial para causar danos severos nas plantas e perdas na produção. Occurrence of Black Scale Saissetia oleae (Hemiptera: Coccidae) in Olive Olea europaea (Oleaceae) cv. Ascolano in Diamantina, Minas Gerais State, Brazil. Abstract. Olive plants Olea europaea L. (Oleaceae) were introduced in the Diamantina region, Minas Gerais State, Brazil mainly because it is a potential place to produce olives and olive oil, with growing global market. The aim of this study was to record the presence of black scale Saissetia oleae (Olivier) (Hemiptera: Coccidae) on olive (cv. Ascolano) in Diamantina. This record shows that S. oleae needs to be monitored when deploying nurseries and crop areas for its potential to cause severe damage in plants and production losses.


BMC Genomics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Becchimanzi ◽  
Maddalena Avolio ◽  
Hamed Bostan ◽  
Chiara Colantuono ◽  
Flora Cozzolino ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Venom is one of the most important sources of regulation factors used by parasitic Hymenoptera to redirect host physiology in favour of the developing offspring. This has stimulated a number of studies, both at functional and “omics” level, which, however, are still quite limited for ectophagous parasitoids that permanently paralyze and suppress their victims (i.e., idiobiont parasitoids). Results Here we present a combined transcriptomic and proteomic study of the venom of the generalist idiobiont wasp Bracon nigricans, an ectophagous larval parasitoid of different lepidopteran species, for which we recently described the host regulation strategy and the functional role of the venom in the induction of physiological changes in parasitized hosts. The experimental approach used led to the identification of the main components of B. nigricans venom involved in host regulation. Enzymes degrading lipids, proteins and carbohydrates are likely involved in the mobilization of storage nutrients from the fat body and may concurrently be responsible for the release of neurotoxic fatty acids inducing paralysis, and for the modulation of host immune responses. Conclusion The present work contributes to fill the gap of knowledge on venom composition in ectoparasitoid wasps, and, along with our previous physiological study on this species, provides the foundation on which to develop a functional model of host regulation, based both on physiological and molecular data. This paves the way towards a better understanding of parasitism evolution in the basal lineages of Hymenoptera and to the possible exploitation of venom as source of bioinsecticidal molecules.


Parasitology ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Anderson

SummaryThe nature of parasitism at the population level is defined in terms of the parasite's influence on the natural intrinsic growth rate of its host population. It is suggested that the influence on this rate is related to the average parasite burden/host and hence to the statistical distribution of parasites within the host population.Theoretical models of host–parasite associations are used to assess the regulatory influence of parasitic species on host population growth. Model predictions suggest that three specific groups of population processes are of particular importance: over-dispersion of parasite numbers/host, density dependence in parasite mortality or reproduction and parasite-induced host mortality that increases faster than linearly with the parasite burden. Other population mechanisms are shown to have a destabilizing influence, namely: parasite-induced reduction in host reproductive potential, direct parasite reproduction within the host and time delays in the development of transmission stages of the parasite.These regulatory and destabilizing processes are shown to be commonly observed features of natural host-parasite associations. It is argued that interactions in the real world are characterized by a degree of tension between these regulatory and destabilizing forces and that population rate parameter values in parasite life-cycles are very far from being a haphazard selection of all numerically possible values. It is suggested that evolutionary pressures in observed associations will tend to counteract a strong destabilizing force by an equally strong regulatory influence. Empirical evidence is shown to support this suggestion in, for example, associations between larval digeneans and molluscan hosts (parasite-induced reduction in host reproductive potential counteracted by tight density-dependent constraints on parasite population growth), and interactions between protozoan parasites and mammalian hosts (direct parasite reproduction counteracted by a well-developed immunological response by the host).The type of laboratory and field data required to improve our understanding of the dynamical properties of host–parasite population associations is discussed and it is suggested that quantitative measurement of rates of parasite-induced host mortality, degrees of over-dispersion, transmission rates and reproductive and mortality rates of both host and parasite would provide an important first step. The value of laboratory work in this area is demonstrated by reference to studies which highlight the regulatory influence of parasitic species on host population growth.


Parasitology ◽  
1941 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ewen Cameron

1. While investigating the parasites of the holly leaf-miner (Phytomyza ilicis Curt.) with a view to utilizing them in the control of this troublesome pest of holly in western Canada, a species of Opius, which on examination proved to be new to science, was reared from the fly puparia.2. A fairly complete account of the general systematics, distribution, biology, and morphology of the various developmental stages of this parasite is set down in the preceding pages. The primary larva is particularly interesting because of its unusual orientation. After the anatomical details had been worked out it was discovered that the concave side of the larva, which would normally be regarded as the ventral surface, is actually the dorsal one.3. The genus Opius, whose distribution is world-wide, contains a very large number of species which parasitize important economic pests. In temperate regions the insects which suffer most from their attacks are species of Pegomyia, Agromyza, Rhagoletis, Phytomyza and Cerodonta, whilst in tropical and subtropical areas the most favoured hosts belong to one or other of the two genera Dacus and Anastrepha.4. The host relationship of the genus, because of its importance from both economic and taxonomic standpoints, is discussed at some length.5. In the first stadium Opius ilicis is a larval parasite, but the three succeeding instars live in the host pupa, and the imago emerges from the puparium. A very interesting phase in the life history of this parasite occurs towards the end of the first stage. At this point the development of the larva is arrested and further growth cannot take place until the host has pupated.6. Very little work has so far been carried out on the larval morphology of the Opiinae, but that done up to the present, including the foregoing descriptions, would seem to indicate that the larvae of this tribe form a fairly homogeneous group. The main distinguishing characters of these larvae are listed in section VII of this paper.7. It is pointed out that O. ilicis, in spite of being intrinsically inferior to Chrysocharis gemma, is responsible for the destruction of a certain number of hosts which escape the attentions of the latter parasite, and although the percentage accounted for is small (maximum parasitism in 1939 4%), it nevertheless fills a particular niche of its own, and so must be of some definite value in the scheme of control.8. The chief method employed by the first instar of Chrysocharis gemma in the destruction of rival Opius larvae would appear to be direct mandibular attack. Several reasons have been put forward to account for the decided inferiority which is exhibited by the Braconid when it comes into conflict with this Chalcid.9. In section X, a number of interesting points which have a general bearing on the study of parasite larvae are discussed. These include the cephalic skeleton and its probable function in successive instars, the taxonomic value of this structure in the parasitic Hymenoptera, the apparent absence of a tracheal system in the second and third instar larvae of O. ilicis, and arrested development in the Opiinae and some related forms.


Parasitology ◽  
1959 ◽  
Vol 49 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 309-315 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Kabata

Parasites of marine fishes have attracted, comparatively speaking, but little attention among scientists. This is true especially for the parasites of those fishes which live in the open seas, and are therefore less accessible to investigation than their relatives inhabiting coastal waters. On many occasions, when chance has brought such a parasite to the attention of a research worker, the scarcity of data allowed no more than mere recording of the existence and a brief description of the parasitic species. Now, when investigations into the parasite fauna of marine fishes are being intensified, it is possible to add to our knowledge of such forgotten species of parasites, in order to appreciate more clearly their possible importance to their hosts and, indirectly, to the economics of the stocks of our food fishes.


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