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Journal ArticleDOI

Parasitoids induce production of the dispersal morph of the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum

John J. Sloggett, +1 more
- 01 Aug 2002 - 
- Vol. 98, Iss: 2, pp 323-333
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TLDR
These experiments are the first to demonstrate a more indirect influence of parasites on insect polyphenism and the induction of wing development by parasitoids shows that host defences against parasites may also include an increased rate of dispersal away from infected habitats.
Abstract
In animals, inducible morphological defences against natural enemies mostly involve structures that are protective or make the individual invulnerable to future attack. In the majority of such examples, predators are the selecting agent while examples involving parasites are much less common. Aphids produce a winged dispersal morph under adverse conditions, such as crowding or poor plant quality. It has recently been demonstrated that pea aphids, Acyrthosiphon pisum, also produce winged offspring when exposed to predatory ladybirds, the first example of an enemy-induced morphological change facilitating dispersal. We examined the response of A. pisum to another important natural enemy, the parasitoid Aphidius ervi, in two sets of experiments. In the first set of experiments, two aphid clones both produced the highest proportion of winged offspring when exposed as colonies on plants to parasitoid females. In all cases, aphids exposed to male parasitoids produced a higher mean proportion of winged offspring than controls, but not significantly so. Aphid disturbance by parasitoids was greatest in female treatments, much less in male treatments and least in controls, tending to match the pattern of winged offspring production. In a second set of experiments, directly parasitised aphids produced no greater proportion of winged offspring than unparasitised controls, thus being parasitised itself is not used by aphids for induction of the winged morph. The induction of wing development by parasitoids shows that host defences against parasites may also include an increased rate of dispersal away from infected habitats. While previous work has shown that parasitism suppresses wing development in parasitised individuals, our experiments are the first to demonstrate a more indirect influence of parasites on insect polyphenism. Because predators and parasites differ fundamentally in a variety of attributes, our finding suggests that the wing production in response to natural enemies is of general occurrence in A. pisum and, perhaps, in other aphids.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Causes and consequences of animal dispersal strategies: relating individual behaviour to spatial dynamics.

TL;DR: Logistical difficulties preclude a detailed study of dispersal for many species, however incorporating unrealistic dispersal assumptions in spatial population models may yield inaccurate and costly predictions, and further studies are necessary to explore the importance of incorporating specific condition‐dependent dispersal strategies for evolutionary and population dynamic predictions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variation in resistance to parasitism in aphids is due to symbionts not host genotype

TL;DR: Results indicate that symbiont-mediated resistance to parasitism is a general phenomenon in A. pisum and that, at least for the isolates and genotypes considered, it is the symbionT isolate that determines the level of resistance, not aphid genotype or any interaction between isolate and genotype.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology and evolution of aphid-ant interactions

TL;DR: This review uses aphid-ant interactions to illustrate the whole range of interactions from antagonistic to mutualistic as well as to identify the processes affecting the degree of association and in particular the context within which such interactions evolved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aphid polyphenisms: trans-generational developmental regulation through viviparity.

TL;DR: The acquisition of viviparity in Aphididae is considered to be the basis for maternal regulation of these polyphenisms, and through which environmental cues can be transferred to developing embryos through the physiological state of the mother.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wing Dimorphism in Aphids

TL;DR: In this review, an overview of the major features of the aphid wing dimorphism is provided and what is known about the mechanisms underlying the dimorphisms is reviewed.
References
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Book

Nonparametric statistics for the behavioral sciences

Sidney Siegel
TL;DR: This is the revision of the classic text in the field, adding two new chapters and thoroughly updating all others as discussed by the authors, and the original structure is retained, and the book continues to serve as a combined text/reference.
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Evolution and the Theory of Games

TL;DR: A modification of the theory of games, a branch of mathematics first formulated by Von Neumann and Morgenstern in 1944 for the analysis of human conflicts, was proposed in this paper.
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Parasitoids: Behavioral and Evolutionary Ecology

TL;DR: This book synthesizes the work of both schools of parasitoid biology and asks how a consideration of evolutionary biology can help to understand the behavior, ecology, and diversity of the approximately one to two million species of Parasitoids found on earth.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ecology and evolution of inducible defenses

TL;DR: Inducible defenses are responses activated through a previous encounter with a consumer or competitor that confer some degree of resistance to subsequent attacks as discussed by the authors, which can affect the probability of individual survival and growth.
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