The fitness consequence of many behaviours of the small digger wasp, Cerceris rubida (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae), the only European species of its genus in which females share nests, are still unknown. Here, I present novel data on the nesting patterns and nest parasites of an Italian population of this wasp, with emphasis on which behavioural strategies may have evolved to reduce brood parasitism. Nests were established mainly in horizontal surfaces with scarce vegetation and hard soil, resulting in spatially clumped nests; the extent of nest aggregation increased over a 6-year period. Wasp brood cells are attacked by the miltogrammine fly Pterella grisea (Diptera: Sarcophagidae), which waits for nest-returning wasps on perching sites and then follows them in flight (satellite flight), eventually landing on the nest entrance and larvipositing without entering further in the tunnel. This technique seems to be adaptive for the parasitic flies, which would be rejected from nests by the guarding wasps if attempting to enter. The daily activity of the flies closely matched the host wasp’s provisioning activity, but C. rubida females were able to partially confound the tracking flies by performing evasive manoeuvres while returning to the nest. Patches with higher nest density and nests with more resident females did suffer more fly landings on nest entrances (a prerequisite for larviposition). These trends, however, disappeared on a per nest basis and on a per wasp provisioning flight basis, respectively. Across two years, only 6% of brood cells were parasitized, a picture similar to what observed for miltogrammine flies at nest aggregations of other Cerceris spp., and new data are necessary to test if there is a benefit of either nest density or nest sharing against P. grisea parasitism.

Interactions between the Social Digger Wasp, Cerceris rubida, and Its Brood Parasitic Flies at a Mediterranean Nest Aggregation / C. Polidori. - In: JOURNAL OF INSECT BEHAVIOR. - ISSN 0892-7553. - 30:1(2017), pp. 86-102. [10.1007/s10905-017-9601-9]

Interactions between the Social Digger Wasp, Cerceris rubida, and Its Brood Parasitic Flies at a Mediterranean Nest Aggregation

C. Polidori
2017

Abstract

The fitness consequence of many behaviours of the small digger wasp, Cerceris rubida (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae), the only European species of its genus in which females share nests, are still unknown. Here, I present novel data on the nesting patterns and nest parasites of an Italian population of this wasp, with emphasis on which behavioural strategies may have evolved to reduce brood parasitism. Nests were established mainly in horizontal surfaces with scarce vegetation and hard soil, resulting in spatially clumped nests; the extent of nest aggregation increased over a 6-year period. Wasp brood cells are attacked by the miltogrammine fly Pterella grisea (Diptera: Sarcophagidae), which waits for nest-returning wasps on perching sites and then follows them in flight (satellite flight), eventually landing on the nest entrance and larvipositing without entering further in the tunnel. This technique seems to be adaptive for the parasitic flies, which would be rejected from nests by the guarding wasps if attempting to enter. The daily activity of the flies closely matched the host wasp’s provisioning activity, but C. rubida females were able to partially confound the tracking flies by performing evasive manoeuvres while returning to the nest. Patches with higher nest density and nests with more resident females did suffer more fly landings on nest entrances (a prerequisite for larviposition). These trends, however, disappeared on a per nest basis and on a per wasp provisioning flight basis, respectively. Across two years, only 6% of brood cells were parasitized, a picture similar to what observed for miltogrammine flies at nest aggregations of other Cerceris spp., and new data are necessary to test if there is a benefit of either nest density or nest sharing against P. grisea parasitism.
No
English
Cerceris; miltogramminae; nest parasites; Nest settlement; nest sharing
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2017
Springer
30
1
86
102
17
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
NON aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Interactions between the Social Digger Wasp, Cerceris rubida, and Its Brood Parasitic Flies at a Mediterranean Nest Aggregation / C. Polidori. - In: JOURNAL OF INSECT BEHAVIOR. - ISSN 0892-7553. - 30:1(2017), pp. 86-102. [10.1007/s10905-017-9601-9]
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
1
262
Article (author)
no
C. Polidori
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/800971
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