Abstract
When female host feeding parasitoids encounter a potential host, they face a complicated trade-off between either laying an egg for investing in current reproduction or feeding on or killing the host for future reproduction. Few studies have measured these behavioral shift patterns in a given host-parasitoid association thus far. We systematically assessed the behavioral shifts and life history traits of a host feeding parasitoid, Necremnus tutae, on different instars of its host Tuta absoluta. N. tutae females, as idiobiont host feeding parasitoids, can act on the 1st–4th instar larvae of T. absoluta by either host feeding, parasitizing or host killing. Moreover, a significant behavioral shift was observed on different instar hosts. N. tutae preferred to feed on the young hosts (1st and 2nd instars), lay eggs on middle-aged hosts (3rd instars) and kill old hosts (4th instars) by ovipositor-mediated stinging. The offspring of N. tutae showed a significant female-biased sex ratio, with the number of instars of T. absoluta larvae that were parasitized increasing. Specifically, nonreproductive host mortality induced by host feeding and host killing accounted for high percentages of the total mortality (ranging from 70% on 3rd instar hosts to 88% on 1st instar and 4th instar hosts). We hypothesize that N. tutae could be not merely a parasitoid but also a predator. Our results shed light on the nonreproductive abilities of a host feeding parasitoid that should be given further attention, especially when evaluating the efficacy of parasitoids.
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Introduction
Insect parasitoids are important components of natural communities and are used to control insect pests in biological control programs worldwide1. In their interactions with hosts, parasitoids kill the hosts either by laying eggs in/upon hosts followed by offspring development (i.e., reproductive mortality) or by directly feeding on the hosts (host feeding, only exhibited by host feeding parasitoids)2. Host killing (or host stinging) behavior, in which a parasitoid can directly kill hosts with its ovipositor without reproductive behavior, has been observed in many parasitoids3,4,5. As parasitoids are very small in size, it is time consuming and labor intensive to distinguish their host killing behavior from other action modes4,5. Hence, for host feeding parasitoids, host killing was erroneously attributed to host feeding or was completely overlooked by many previous studies, resulting in the underestimation of their biological control efficacy6,7. That is, host killing, as a type of nonreproductive behavior, constitutes a hidden dimension of host-parasitoid trophic networks. To date, few studies have measured the three action modes (parasitism, host feeding and host killing) in a given host-parasitoid association5.
When female parasitoids encounter a host, they may first insert their ovipositor into the host to assess the suitability of the host8. Thereafter, the female parasitoids can either lay an egg and thus invest in current reproduction or feed on the host and thus invest in future reproduction2. During this process, they face a trade-off between current reproduction and future reproduction depending on internal factors (female physiological stage) and external factors (e.g., host development stage, host density)2,9. Female parasitoids give preference to host feeding when they are young in order to develop more eggs, as they usually harbor a low egg load and stay in a low-nutrition state10. For example, Aphytis melinus DeBach (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae) females invest more in host feeding than in oviposition when they have a lower egg load and fewer nutritional reserves11. With regard to external factors, female parasitoids prefer to feed on hosts of poor quality for their nutrition while saving hosts of higher quality for oviposition and offspring development12,13. In addition to host feeding and parasitic oviposition, some parasitoid species from holometabolous (Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Diptera) and hemimetabolous (Hemiptera) host taxa are known to exhibit host killing behavior or pseudoparasitism5, in which parasitoids tend to reject the host without ovipositing or host feeding after stinging herbivore hosts with their ovipositor. However, the ecological significance of this behavior is not very clear. Therefore, it would be interesting to determine how a given parasitoid species shifts among parasitic oviposition, host feeding and host killing when confronted with host larvae at different developmental stages. Addressing this subject could enhance our understanding of host-parasitoid biological interactions.
Tuta absoluta (Meyrick) is native to Peru in western South America14. Before 2006, it was found only in South American countries and Easter Island15,16. However, after its introduction into Europe in 2006, it spread rapidly throughout Afro-Eurasia and has become a major threat to tomato production worldwide17,18,19,20,21. In 2017, T. absoluta was detected in Xinjiang, China22, and management methods are currently being developed20,23,24. It mainly affects the photosynthesis of plants by mining and feeding on the leaves of the host plants during its larval stage25, but it also eats the stems and fruits of plants at high population densities, causing plant death and fruit fall off and rot, resulting in substantial economic losses15. The areas that were invaded by T. absoluta early on (mainly in Europe) have reduced the proportion of chemical control and have shifted to an integrated pest management (IPM) system with biological control at its core23, mitigating the potential negative effects of pesticides on beneficial arthropods26. Necremnus tutae Ribes & Bernardo (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae), which is native to and widespread in Europe and Africa, is a typical idiobiont-synovigenic host feeding eulophid parasitoid, the female adults of which kill or paralyze the host by injecting venom before laying eggs and feeding on the host27. This species has been identified as a promising biological control agent for T. absoluta17,28,29,30, as it not only parasitizes the larvae31 but also can directly feed on and/or kill all instars of T. absoluta larvae30. Moreover, for this organism, hosts killed by host killing can be easily distinguished from those killed by host feeding and parasitism30. Hence, N. tutae could be a good candidate for investigating the behavioral shifts among parasitism, host feeding and host killing when the parasitoid encounters hosts at different developmental stages.
To deepen our understanding of host-parasitoid biological interactions and to explore whether parasitoids can choose different attacking behaviors and exhibit different life history traits when they meet different instar hosts, this study assessed the host preference and life history traits of a host feeding parasitoid, N. tutae, in response to different instars of T. absoluta larvae. We described the N. tutae behavioral shift from oviposition to host feeding and/or host killing and further compared the life history traits of adult parasitoids when they encountered different instar hosts under laboratory conditions.
Results
Life history traits and behavioral shift of N. tutae on different host instars
Life history traits
The number of hosts on which N. tutae females fed and their host feeding proportion were significantly different among the different host instars of T. absoluta offered (host feeding: F3, 87 = 14.75, P < 0.0001, host feeding proportion: F3, 87 = 85.43, P < 0.001, Table 1). Both host feeding level and host feeding proportion decreased with host instar stage. There was no significant difference in the number of hosts killed for the different instars of T. absoluta larvae offered (F3, 87 = 0.55, P = 0.651, Table 1). Both the parasitism level and parasitism proportion of N. tutae females were significantly different among the different host instars offered (parasitism: F3, 87 = 4.66, P = 0.005, parasitism proportion: F3, 87 = 17.08, P < 0.001, Table 1). The parasitoids laid most of their eggs on 3rd and 2nd instar larvae, an intermediate number of eggs on 1st instar larvae and the fewest number of eggs on 4th instar larvae.
The total mortality of host larvae was significantly different among the T. absoluta instars offered (F3, 87 = 3.51, P = 0.018, Table 1), and higher mortality was observed in 1st and 2nd instar larvae than in 4th instar larvae, with intermediate values for 3rd instar larvae. Nonreproductive mortality (host feeding + host killing) caused by the parasitoid accounted for a very high proportion of the total host mortality (range 69% on 3rd instar larvae to 85% on 1st instar larvae).
The longevity of N. tutae females was significantly different when they were fed upon distinct host instars (F3, 87 = 7.78, P < 0.001, Table 1), with a higher longevity observed when 1st and 2nd instar larvae were offered than when larvae of 4th instar were provided, with intermediate values for 3rd instar larvae.
Behavioral shift
Parasitoids preferred to feed on 1st instar (G = 553.004, df = 2, P < 0.001, Fig. 1) and 2nd instar hosts (G = 31.828, df = 2, P < 0.001, respectively), while they preferred to parasitize 3rd instar larvae (G = 11.438, df = 2, P = 0.003) and kill 4th instar larvae (G = 400.254, df = 2, P < 0.001, Fig. 1).
Development times of immature stages of N. tutae and body sizes of adults that developed on different instar larvae of T. absoluta
Both host instar offered and sex of offspring had significant effects on the development times of the egg, larval and pupal stages (Table 2, Fig. 2A, B, C), but the interaction between the two factors affected only the pupal stage (Table 2). The development time of the different developmental stages (egg, larval and pupal stages) tended to be longest in the 4th instar hosts. The duration of the pupal stage also differed between the sexes, with males developing faster than females (Fig. 2C).
Both host instar and sex of offspring had significant effects on the body size of female parasitoids, and there was an interaction between host instars and sex of offspring (Table 2, Fig. 2D). Body size increased with instar stage at parasitism, and this effect was stronger for the larger sex (i.e., females).
Survival and sex ratio of N. tutae offspring reared on different host instars
The proportion of survival of immature parasitoids did not vary among different instar hosts (ranging from 0.51 to 0.57, F 3, 87 = 0.62, P = 0.604). The offspring sex ratio showed significant differences among different instar hosts (F 3, 74 = 4.99, P = 0.003). The highest sex ratio (number of males/total emerged adults) was observed in the 1st instar host (0.86 ± 0.03, n = 26), followed by the 2nd instar host (0.66 ± 0.05, n = 24) and 3rd instar host (0.67 ± 0.04, n = 20), and the lowest was generated in the 4th instar host (0.50 ± 0.09, n = 21).
Discussion
In this study, we found that N. tutae, as a typical idiobiont host feeding parasitoid, can act on the 1st–4th instar larvae of T. absoluta by host feeding, parasitizing or host killing. Meanwhile, the behavior of parasitoids shifted from host feeding to killing with the advancement of the host larval stage. The parasitism proportions in the 2nd and 3rd host instars were optimal, but both were less than 0.30, indicating that the majority of attacked hosts did not survive but also did not develop into parasitoids.
N. tutae can feed on all instar hosts and prefers 1st–2nd instar hosts. This indicates that this parasitoid prefers to feed on younger hosts. This result was consistent with many previous studies focused on host feeding parasitoids, such as Bracon nigricans Szépligeti (Hymenoptera: Braconidae)32, Eretmocerus mundus Mercet (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae)33 and Eretmocerus hayati Zolnerowich and Rose (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae)34. Compared with older hosts, younger hosts have lower nutritional quality and show a weaker immune response to parasitism from parasitoids; hence, parasitoids may easily successfully forage and feed on younger hosts than on older hosts2.
Host feeding parasitoids have a constant need for potential hosts to balance the trade-off between producing offspring for current reproduction and feeding for future reproduction35, so they easily evolve the ability to make rapid behavioral decisions based on their physiological requirements and host quality assessment. On the one hand, the behavioral decisions of parasitoids could be directly driven by their physiological requirements with respect to egg maturation. As synovigenic parasitoids, newly emerged N. tutae females usually have few mature eggs, so most of their eggs are developed and matured by obtaining nutrients by feeding on hosts after emergence. That is why host feeding by N. tutae was observed more in young females than in older females. On the other hand, we propose that feeding on younger hosts could be a general trend for all host feeding parasitoids2,9, as younger hosts usually have smaller body sizes and lower mobility. In addition, it is worth noting that our results showed some differences from those of Calvo et al.36. They indicated that Necremnus artynes (Walker) (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) preferred feeding on the 2nd instar host of T. absoluta rather than the 1st instar host. This discrepancy could result from the different experimental protocols. They put four instars (1st–4th instar) in the same Petri dishes and simultaneously provided them to the parasitoid; moreover, this experiment was conducted within only 48 h. We hypothesize that access to mixed instar hosts could increase the difficulty for parasitoids in identifying 1st instar hosts for host feeding during such a short observation period, as 1st instar hosts are much smaller than 2nd instar hosts.
In the present study, N. tutae parasitized all instars of T. absoluta but preferred 2nd- and 3rd-instar hosts. The 1st instar host, which was the smallest in size, had less body fluid and resulted in smaller offspring. In contrast, 4th instar hosts had the largest body size with the highest amount of body fluid, but they had a strong capacity to resist the actions of the parasitoids. Based on our previous observation, 4th instar larvae of T. absoluta are able to escape the parasitoids by moving out of the leaf epidermis and quickly abandoning the current leaf upon encountering N. tutae that is beginning to probe the leaf30. Taken together, these two points indicate that the 2nd instar and 3rd instar hosts of T. absoluta are the optimal hosts for offspring production by N. tutae. Similar results have been reported for many other host feeding parasitoids, such as Er. mundus33, E. hayati34, N. artynes36.
In addition to host feeding and oviposition, host killing is also a very important measure for host control by some host feeding parasitoids7. However, entomologists have overlooked this behavior or directly combined it with host feeding, as host killing is very difficult to distinguish from host feeding36,37. In the present study, N. tutae showed a high capacity to kill all instar hosts by ovipositor-mediated stinging (ranging from 26 to 75% of offered hosts), exhibiting a preference for 4th instar hosts, wherein the proportion of total host mortality of 4th instar T. absoluta hosts caused by parasitoids reached up to 75%. In fact, the 4th instar host is used to escaping the attacks of parasitoids by moving out of the mine when it encounters a parasitoid30. During the escape process, parasitoids keep in step with the host and attempt to sting the host with their ovipositors. Once the host is successfully stung by the parasitoid, it experiences increasing paralysis until death as venom or another chemical substance is injected into the host body by the parasitoid5,32,38, even though it may still struggle to climb out of the mine and leave the current leaf. Because of its escape strategy, the 4th instar host is very difficult to parasitize, as the time window for oviposition in the host by the parasitoid is short, usually only 10 seconds30. Once the host leaves the mine, the parasitoid does not parasitize the host (personal observation by Yibo Zhang). According to this result, it may be more accurate to interpret host killing as unsuccessful parasitism killing the hosts. During the host killing process, the primary intention of the parasitoid could be parasitism by injecting venom while laying an egg. However, injecting venom can usually easily be completed, but laying eggs (parasitism) on later instar hosts may be interrupted by aggressive and agile behavior of the host, even if the host had been injected with venom by the parasitoid.
Besides, the high capacity of host killing of N. tutae and escaping behavior of T. absoluta could partly result from that N. tutae is not a natural parasitoid of T. absoluta, as the former is native to Europe/African regions but the later originated from South American. When an exotic invasive species possessing similar ecological and physiological attributes to indigenous hosts becomes abundant in the ecosystem, maladaptive oviposition decisions by parasitoids causing nonreproductive effects could intensify, leading to an evolutionary trap for indigenous parasitoids39,40. Similarly, the indigenous generalist egg parasitoid Telenomus podisi Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) accepts eggs of the newly invasive alien stink bug Halyomorpha balys (Stal) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) at high rates and causes some host eggs to abort development, but their offspring cannot successfully develop39. That is to say, native species may either evolve or learn mechanisms to cope with the invaders (e.g. through chemical defences, improved competitive abilities, predator-avoidance behavior) and ultimately persist on their own 40. From an evolutionary perspective, nonreproductive behavioral events (host killing) could create favorable conditions for the establishment of new, viable host-parasitoid associations.
A similar agility-based escape strategy of high-instar larvae that encounter parasitoids was recorded for another two host feeding larval parasitoids, Stenomesius sp. nr. japonicus (Ashmead) and Necremnus cf. artynes (Walker) (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae), in Spain by Chailleux et al.37. They observed host feeding and host stinging behaviors of two parasitoids in the laboratory but did not further assess the two behaviors and took them to be host killing without parasitism (90.2 larvae for S. sp.nr. japonicus, 26.2 larvae for N. cf. artynes). Van Driesche et al.41 also reported host killing behavior in two mealybug parasitoids, namely, Epidinocarsis diversicornis (Howard) and Acerophagus coccois Cox & Williams (Hymenoptra: Encyrtidae). In addition, some researchers have also described and assessed host stinging behavior in several host feeding parasitoids. Barret and Brunner42 indicated that the leaf miner parasitoid Pnigalio flavipes (Ashmead) (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) exhibited three types of parasitoid-induced mortality (host stinging with oviposition, host feeding and host stinging without oviposition). Cebolla et al.4 confirmed that two host feeding parasitoids, Aphtyis melinus and Aphtyis chrysomphali (Mercet) (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae), rejected approximately 30% of the California red scale Aonidiella aurantia (Maskell) (Hemiptera: Diaspididae) that it encountered. In addition, some researchers have also systemically investigated the host killing behavior of some host feeding parasitoids, such as Encarsia tricolor Forster (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae)43, B. nigricans32 and E. hayati34. That is, host killing behavior by ovipositor stinging is as common as parasitism or host feeding in many host feeding parasitoids5. Even though some authors indicated that this behavior could be used to decrease pest density and consequently maintain plant quality for successful development of additional offspring44 or can provide a food reserve for the offspring via killing of more host larvae45, it is unfortunate that the mechanisms underlying this behavior and the decision-making process of the parasitoids are not clear to date.
The body size of the offspring of N. tutae increased with host instar age. We propose that this phenomenon could be attributed to the larger body size of older T. absoluta larvae compared to younger larvae. Generally, insects have to grow for a longer time to achieve a larger body size46. Obviously, there is a size development trade-off. The larvae develop faster in early instar hosts than in later instar hosts, at the cost of being smaller in body size in the former. Similar results were reported for S. sp.nr. japonicus37 and B. nigricans47. In addition, the sex ratio of the offspring of N. tutae showed a significant male bias as the host instar stage decreased. This result was consistent with many previous studies. Barret and Brunner41 found that female P. flavipes tended to emerge from the larger leaf miner stages, but males emerged from the smaller stages. Chailleux et al.36 indicated that the sex ratio of S. sp.nr. japonicus was female biased when hosts were older, and only females emerged when parasitoids developed in T. absoluta fourth-instar larvae. Similar results were also observed for Bracon nigricans in Europe32 and Africa47. That is, more male offspring of these parasitoids developed from younger hosts. This result was in accordance with males having a small time-budget advantage under sexual selection48, which means that smaller males may be more agile and maneuverable when courting and searching for mates, resulting in increased mating and reproduction success49. Meanwhile, smaller individuals require less food to support themselves, so smaller males should have free energy and time for any activity that increases their mating and reproductive success50. Based on our observations, male N. tutae actively seek, contact and mate with females during the mating process. On the other hand, female offspring generated larger body sizes on older instar hosts. This corresponds with fecundity selection in evolutionary theory46. This means fecundity generally increases with female size and may reach an asymptote at large body size, but fecundity selection favoring small female size has not been proposed or observed until now51,52. In summary, the male-biased sex ratio of N. tutae with variable instar hosts could result in optimal or better fitness and shed light on the sexual size dimorphism of N. tutae. This organism was under two major evolutionary forces: fecundity selection in females and sexual selection in males. However, the current results do not fully address this issue, and more research on N. tutae or other similar species needs to be conducted in the future.
A significant behavioral shift among host feeding, oviposition and host killing across different hosts in N. tutae was found in the present study. It preferred to feed on young hosts, lay eggs on middle-aged hosts and directly kill old hosts. These behavioral shifts could shed light on the mechanisms underlying the behavioral preference of host feeding parasitoids facing variable hosts. Meanwhile, as the nonreproductive mortality of N. tutae on its hosts accounted for a very high proportion of the total host mortality, up to 88% on 1st- and 4th-instar hosts, these results could broaden the current host-parasitoid population and community models by revealing a nonreproductive dimension (host killing) and could help to elucidate the potential of the nonreproductive effects to cascade through food chains and influence ecosystem services such as biological control. We propose that entomologists should give more attention to the nonreproductive abilities of host feeding parasitoids, and these should be considered when evaluating the efficacy of parasitoids as biological control agents.
Methods
Tuta absoluta and Necremnus tutae cultures
All plants and insects were maintained in a climate-controlled chamber (PGC-450, Xunon Instruments (Beijing) Co., Ltd., China) at 26 ± 1 °C with 70–80% relative humidity (RH) and a 14 h:10 h light:dark (L:D) photoperiod at the experimental station (Yuxi City, Yunnan Province, N24°21’, E102°32’, 6 m a.s.l.) of the Department of Biological Invasions (DBI), Institute of Plant Protection, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
Approximately 80 pairs the tomato leaf miner, Tuta absoluta, were collected from tomato fields during the summer of 2019 in Yuxi city. A laboratory colony of T. absoluta was maintained in a gauze-covered cage (40 × 40 × 60 cm, mesh size = 120) on young tomato plants (pink fruit tomato, Shouyan PT326, Shandong Shouguang Vegetable-seed Industrial Group, China). When the six true leaves had fully developed, the tomato plants were transferred into gauze cages to maintain the colony of T. absoluta. To obtain a continuous supply of host larvae at the same age, two young tomato plants were infested daily with 40–50 adults in a gauze-covered cage (40 × 40 × 40 cm, mesh size = 120). After 24 h, all the adults were removed, and plants were checked daily until the offspring developed to the desired instar stage for the experiments. Based on our primary experiments, 1st instar larvae of T. absoluta usually appeared after days 4–5, 2nd instars on days 8–9, 3rd instars on days 11–12, and 4th instars on days 14–15.
In 2019, approximately 100 pairs of Necremnus tutae were collected from tomato fields close to the Institute for Research and Technology in Agriculture (IRTA) in Cabrils, Barcelona (Spain) (N41°30′, E2°22′, 6 m a.s.l.) and introduced to China. Since then, an indoor colony of N. tutae has been maintained on 2nd- to 3rd-instar larvae of T. absoluta on young tomato plants in the DBI laboratory. To avoid the risk of this parasitoid parasitizing other native species in China, the colony of N. tutae was reared in the greenhouse of the quarantine center of the DBI in Yunnan before assessing the risk posed by this parasitoid to other similar native species.
Experimental setup
To obtain newly emerged parasitoids, N. tutae pupae were isolated in 1.5 ml tubes. When adult females emerged (less than 24 h old), males were introduced into the same tube, and after mating was observed (usually within a few minutes), they were considered mated young females. Then, each sample was transferred into a 10 ml tube containing filter paper slightly moistened with distilled water to provide water.
Behavioral preference and life history traits of N. tutae on different host instars
To investigate the behavioral preference of N. tutae for different host instars, we designed a special cage (Fig. 3). The upper part was a cylindrical transparent plastic container (13 cm in height, 9 cm in diameter) with a gauze screen on top for ventilation, a lateral hole (1 cm in diameter) with a cotton plug and a bottom lid with a hole (1 cm in diameter) in the center. The lower part was another cylindrical transparent plastic container (6 cm in height, 15 cm in diameter) with a lid on top that also had a circular hole (1 cm in diameter). The two lids of the upper and lower containers were glued, keeping the holes of the lids aligned. The upper container was used to hold the tomato stalks infested with the desired host instar, and the lower container was used for watering the plant (see picture in Fig. 3). During this experiment, we did not use intact plants, as intact plants are too tall and take up more space; thus, we could not observe the exact natural behavior of the parasitoids.
After the tomato stalks infested with the desired instar larvae of T. absoluta in the tomato leaf (no less than 20 hosts) were moved into the special cage (Fig. 3), a newly emerged mated female was transferred into the upper part through the lateral hole. After 48 h, the female parasitoid was transferred into another cage with a tomato stalk until death. The stems and tomato leaves that were replaced were transferred into a Petri dish (9 cm in diameter) that had a fine layer of agar solution (5% w/v) to keep the leaves hydrated. The dishes were covered with a transparent plastic film with several small holes made with an insect pin for ventilation. After 96 h, we recorded the number of hosts that were fed upon, killed or parasitized. If the host larvae were parasitized, an egg or a small parasitoid larva (or possibly 2 or 3, but very rarely) could be easily found on or near the host; if the host was directly fed upon, the color of the host body became black or brown, and the body was flat and desiccated; if the host was killed, the color of the host body also became black or brown, but the body was full, and no eggs or larvae of parasitoids could be found22. The replication number of each host instar was no less than 20. The longevity of the female was also recorded.
Immature development, body size, survival and sex ratio of N. tutae offspring on different host instars
Parasitized larvae were randomly numbered to monitor the developmental times of the egg, larval and pupal stages of the parasitoid. Each Petri dish was checked 4 times daily from 8:00 to 20:00 (interval 3 h). The times of egg hatching, pupation and emergence of parasitoid offspring were recorded. The body size (dorsal length from the top of head to the end of the abdomen) of emerged adults was measured with a micrometer under a binocular microscope (SZ-61, Olympus, Japan). The total immature development time was the sum of the durations of the egg, larval and pupal stages. The number of replicates used to determine the developmental times of immature parasitoids on 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th instar larvae of T. absoluta was 50 (25 for females), 50 (25 for females), 50 (25 for females) and 50 (25 for females), respectively. Upon emergence, the total number of emerged parasitoids and sex ratio (number of males/total emerged adults) were calculated.
Statistical analysis
To explore differences in life history traits (host feeding, host killing, total host mortality, fecundity, longevity, host feeding rate, parasitization rate, host killing rate, eclosion rate and the ratio of adult males to total offspring) of N. tutae females in response to T. absoluta larval instars, we compared the differences in each life history trait among different host instars by one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s honestly significant difference (HSD). The host feeding rate, parasitism rate and host killing rate of adult parasitoids and the eclosion rate and sex ratio of offspring were transformed by ARCSIN before analysis.
To explore whether the behavioral shifts among host feeding, oviposition and host killing of N. tutae in each host instar were significantly greater than expected, the G-test for goodness-of-fit was used. If no behavioral shift existed, the behavioral rate observed was equal to the expected rate on each instar host (host feeding:oviposition:host killing = 1:1:1).
To explore differences in the development times of eggs, larvae, and pupae and the body size of N. tutae offspring among the four host instars, a general linear model (GLM, two-way ANOVA) was used. Host instars (1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th) and sex of offspring were the two factors, as the developmental times of each stage of female and male parasitoids met assumptions of normality and homoscedasticity. Tukey multiple comparisons between least square means were conducted when the interaction of two factors in the models was significant. If the interaction was not significant, one-way ANOVA complemented with the HSD test was further used to compare the difference in development times among different main factors (host instar and sex of offspring).
All of the analyses were conducted using SAS software (version 9.20).
Ethics approval
This article does not contain any studies involving human participants or animals performed by any of the authors. All local, national or international guidelines and legislation were adhered to for the use of plants in this study.
Consent for publication
Consent for publication was obtained from all authors included in the study.
Data availability
The dataset generated during the current study is available from the corresponding author upon request.
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Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32072495) and the National Key R & D Project of China (2021YFD1400205).
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Y.B.Z., G.F.Z., N.D., X.Q.X. and F.H.W. designed the experiment and wrote the paper. X.C.T., H.W., Y.B.Z. performed the experiment. C.C., J.A., W.X.L. and S.R.W. reviewed the manuscript.
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Zhang, Y., Tian, X., Wang, H. et al. Nonreproductive effects are more important than reproductive effects in a host feeding parasitoid. Sci Rep 12, 11475 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-15296-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-15296-2
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