Publications by authors named "Christine Curty"

Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses the negative impacts of conventional insecticides on the environment and supports the use of biological control agents instead.
  • It specifically examines the effects of the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki on the parasitic wasp Trichogramma chilonis, revealing that while acute toxicity was observed, reproductive success remained unaffected.
  • However, B. thuringiensis did significantly impact T. chilonis's longevity and the time spent on host egg patches, prompting a discussion on the physiological and ecological implications of these findings.
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Parasitoid wasps are taxonomically and biologically extremely diverse. A conceptual framework has recently been developed for understanding life-history evolution and diversification in these animals, and it has confirmed that each of two linked life-history traits - the mode of larval development and the temporal pattern of egg maturation - acts as an organiser of life-history. The framework has been predicated on the assumption that there exists sufficient genetic variation in the latter trait to allow it to be shaped by natural selection.

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The proximate behavioural rules adopted by parasitoid females to manage their foraging time on patches of hosts were studied, under standardized laboratory conditions, in different species (and populations) of the Trichogrammatidae (Hymenoptera) family. Seventeen species/populations were compared and the behavioural mechanisms adopted by the females were identified by means of a Cox's proportional hazards model. On average, females increased their patch-leaving tendency each time a healthy host was attacked and each time a parasitized host was rejected.

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