Journal
ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA
Volume 110, Issue 2, Pages 115-123Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.0013-8703.2004.00126.x
Keywords
Wolbachia; parthenogenesis; Trichogramma kaykai; host fitness; larval competition; Hymenoptera; Trichogrammatidae
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Several hymenopteran parasitoids are infected with parthenogenesis-inducing (PI) Wolbachia. Infected wasps produce daughters instead of sons from unfertilized eggs. Thus far, little is known about the direct effects of PI Wolbachia on their host's fitness. Here, we report reduced competitive ability due to Wolbachia infection in a minute parasitoid wasp, Trichogramma kaykai Pinto and Stouthamer (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Immature survival of infected individuals in a host parasitized by a single infected female, laying a normal clutch of eggs, was lower than those parasitized by a single uninfected individual. When the offspring of infected and uninfected females shared the same host, the infected immatures had significantly lower survival rates than their uninfected counterparts. The survival rate of infected immatures was higher when they competed with other infected immatures from a different infected parent than in competition with uninfected immatures of conspecific wasps. Thus, the host Trichogramma can suffer a substantial reduction in fitness when it is infected with the PI Wolbachia. We discuss why such a reduction is to be expected when populations of infected and uninfected individuals co-occur, and how the reduced competitive ability of PI Wolbachia influences the spread of the bacteria in the field.
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