Zusammenfassung
1. This paper develops and tests in the
field a model that predicts the oviposition rate and the rate of egg
maturation of a synovigenic parasitic wasp during a foraging period. The
parasitoid is Aphytis melinus, the highly successful biological control
agent of California redscale (Aondiniella aurantii), a pest of citrus
worldwide. 2. Females were sampled in the interior canopy of grapefruit
trees either just before and at the end of the foraging period over 2
days and were dissected to determine the starting and ending eggload
distributions. A group of females was caught before the onset of activity and
kept in vials in the field in trees with honey but without access to
hosts during the foraging period. Their eggload at the end of the day
was used to estimate the egg maturation rate during the foraging
period. 3. Two stochastic models are used to predict the eggload
distribution at the end of the day. Both use the observed starting eggload
distribution, the observed length of the foraging period and the estimated
rate of egg maturation. The model providing the better fit uses an
oviposition rate which is an increasing function of the eggload. 4.
The eggload does not attain a steady state distribution during a
foraging period. One-third to one-half of the population is predicted to
experience egg-limitation at some time during the foraging period. Five
percent of the population will experience egg-limitation a second time
within a single day. 5. The common occurrence of egg-limitation over a
single day and the relatively high rate of change of states between
egg- and time-limitation imply that the rate of nutrient acquisition
and use are likely to be subject to strong evolutionary pressures.
Nutzer