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Microorganismal Cues Involved in Host-Location in Asilidae Parasitoids. | LitMetric

Microorganismal Cues Involved in Host-Location in Asilidae Parasitoids.

Biology (Basel)

Laboratorio de Entomología Experimental-Grupo de Investigación en Ecofisiología de Parasitoides y Otros Insectos (GIEP), Departamento de Ecología, Genética y Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Instituto IEGEBA (CONICET-UBA), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires C1428EHA, Argentina.

Published: January 2022

Parasitoids are organisms that kill their host before completing their development. Typical parasitoids belong to Hymenoptera, whose females search for the hosts. But some atypical Diptera parasitoids also have searching larvae that must orientate toward, encounter, and accept hosts, through cues with different levels of detectability. In this work, the chemical cues involved in the detection of the host by parasitoid larvae of the genus are shown with a behavioral approach. Through olfactometry assays, we show that two species of orient to different host species and that chemical cues are produced by microorganisms. We also show that treating potential hosts with antibiotics reduces attractiveness on but not to suggesting that endosymbiotic bacteria responsible for the host cues production should be located in different parts of the host. In fact, we were able to show that is attracted to frass from the most common host. Additionally, we evaluated host orientation under a context of interspecific competence and found that both parasitoid species orient to showing that host competition could occur in the field. Our work shows how microorganisms mediate orientation to hosts but differences in their activity or location in the host result in differences in the attractiveness of different cues. We show for the first time that behaves similar to extending and reinforcing that all species have adopted a parasitoid lifestyle.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8773287PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11010129DOI Listing

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