Although inter-individual diet variation is common in predatory wasp populations, the factors accounting for such variation are still largely unknown. Here, we asked if paired diet dissimilarity in three species of digger wasps correlates with morphological distance and inter-nest distance, two factors previously linked to diet partitioning in vertebrates. Results sharply differed among species and generations. All sampled populations showed significant inter-individual diet variation for prey taxa, but only in half of the cases for prey size. In one generation of two species [Bembix zonata Klug and Stizus continuus (Klug)], similar-sized wasps had similar prey taxonomic spectra (and for S. continuus also similar prey size spectra), a phenomenon which probably reduces intra-specific competition. In addition, B. zonata females nesting closer to each other had more similar prey taxonomic spectra, suggesting that distant females probably hunt on different patches that harbour different prey species. For the females of a further species (Bembix merceti Parker), pairwise size difference and inter-nest distance did not affect prey dissimilarity. Both morphological distance and inter-nest distance are potentially important in shaping the overlap of individual resource use in wasps, though probably only in certain conditions such as a highly clumped distribution of nests and size-related constraints on prey selection.

Morphological distance and inter-nest distance account for intra-specific prey overlap in digger wasps (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae) / C. Polidori, Y. Ballesteros, D. Santoro, J. Tormos, J.D. Asis. - In: POPULATION ECOLOGY. - ISSN 1438-3896. - 54:3(2012), pp. 443-454. [10.1007/s10144-012-0322-9]

Morphological distance and inter-nest distance account for intra-specific prey overlap in digger wasps (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae)

C. Polidori
;
2012

Abstract

Although inter-individual diet variation is common in predatory wasp populations, the factors accounting for such variation are still largely unknown. Here, we asked if paired diet dissimilarity in three species of digger wasps correlates with morphological distance and inter-nest distance, two factors previously linked to diet partitioning in vertebrates. Results sharply differed among species and generations. All sampled populations showed significant inter-individual diet variation for prey taxa, but only in half of the cases for prey size. In one generation of two species [Bembix zonata Klug and Stizus continuus (Klug)], similar-sized wasps had similar prey taxonomic spectra (and for S. continuus also similar prey size spectra), a phenomenon which probably reduces intra-specific competition. In addition, B. zonata females nesting closer to each other had more similar prey taxonomic spectra, suggesting that distant females probably hunt on different patches that harbour different prey species. For the females of a further species (Bembix merceti Parker), pairwise size difference and inter-nest distance did not affect prey dissimilarity. Both morphological distance and inter-nest distance are potentially important in shaping the overlap of individual resource use in wasps, though probably only in certain conditions such as a highly clumped distribution of nests and size-related constraints on prey selection.
English
Diet dissimilarity; Intra-specific competition; Nest distribution; Prey size; Wasp size
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2012
Springer
54
3
443
454
12
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
NON aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Morphological distance and inter-nest distance account for intra-specific prey overlap in digger wasps (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae) / C. Polidori, Y. Ballesteros, D. Santoro, J. Tormos, J.D. Asis. - In: POPULATION ECOLOGY. - ISSN 1438-3896. - 54:3(2012), pp. 443-454. [10.1007/s10144-012-0322-9]
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
5
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
C. Polidori, Y. Ballesteros, D. Santoro, J. Tormos, J.D. Asis
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/800948
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