4.6 Article

Herbivore-induced plant volatiles as cues for habitat assessment by a foraging parasitoid

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 76, Issue 1, Pages 1-8

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2006.01171.x

Keywords

Bayesian updating; Lysiphlebus testaceipes; memory; patch residence time; synomone

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Animals usually require information about the current state of their habitat to optimize their behaviour. For this, they can use a learning process through which their estimate is continually updated according to the cues they perceive. Identifying these cues is a long-standing but still inveterate challenge for ecologists. The use of plant cues by aphid parasitoids for the assessment of habitat profitability and the adaptation of patch exploitation was studied. Grounding on predictions from optimal foraging theory, we tested whether parasitoids exploited host patches less intensively after visiting heavily infested plants than after visiting plants bearing fewer aphids. As predicted, after visiting heavily infested plants parasitoids reduced their residence time and attacked fewer hosts in the next patch. This was the case regardless of whether the aphids were actually present on the first plant, indicating that the cue came from the plant. Moreover, the level of infestation of a plant at some distance from the first plant visited affected parasitoid patch exploitation on the second plant in a similar manner, indicating that the cue was volatile. These results highlight a novel role of herbivore-induced volatiles in parasitoid foraging behaviour, different from the widely studied attraction at a distance.

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