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Density-Dependent Growth and Fitness in (Coleoptera: Bothrideridae). | LitMetric

Density-Dependent Growth and Fitness in (Coleoptera: Bothrideridae).

Insects

Shandong Research Center for Forestry Harmful Biological Control Engineering and Technology, College of Plant Protection, Shandong Agricultural University, Tai'an 271018, China.

Published: November 2019

The ectoparasitoid Fairmaire (Coleoptera: Bothrideridae) is an important natural enemy insect, which is artificially mass-reared and released into woodland to control medium and large longhorn beetle species. This study examined the developmental duration (days) of larvae and adult fitness (including numbers of adults emerging per host and mean body size) by exposing a single substitute host, a pupa of (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae), to different densities of larvae. We showed that there was no significant effect on the rate of successful parasitism and cocoon formation, but emergence success and measures of individual adult body size (length, width, and weight) declined with increasing larval density. Larval period and cocoon period increased with larval density, while total weight of adults emerging per host increased initially before reaching a plateau. Our results suggest that a pupa of could be successfully parasitized by a single larva, but multiple larvae can share one host. Excessive larval density caused intraspecific competition among larvae, manifesting in extended developmental duration of immature stage and reduced fitness of adults. Furthermore, the tradeoff between the numbers of adults and body size may stabilize the population dynamics with detectable mutual interference, particularly in competing for limited host resources. These findings suggest six larvae per host would achieve the highest adult fitness and would enhance mass-rearing techniques as part of IPM strategies for longhorn beetles.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6920931PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10110386DOI Listing

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