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Individual variation and prior experience affect the discrimination of a brood-parasite by its subsocial beetle host
Authors:O?Anne?E?Rasa  Email author" target="_blank">Dik?HegEmail author
Institution:(1) Abt. Ethologie, Zoologisches Institut, Universität Bonn, Kirschallee 1, 53115 Bonn, Germany;(2) Department of Behavioural Ecology, Zoological Institute, University of Bern, Wohlenstrasse 50a, 3032 Hinterkappelen, Switzerland;(3) Present address: Kalahari Trails, P.O. Box 77, 8800 Uppington, South Africa
Abstract:In birds, host experience can modify response to parasites but nothing similar is known for insects. We studied two desert tenebrionid beetles, the subsocial host Parastizopus armaticeps and its obligate and ubiquitous brood-(clepto)parasite Eremostibes opacus, which mimics the hostrsquos odour spectrum. Nearly 10% of host burrows in the field (n=214) remain unparasitised even after introducing E. opacus experimentally (n=22). In discrimination tests, 7% of naive host beetles eject the parasite, showing individual variation in olfactory discrimination ability. To test for effects of prior breeding experience, naive (ldquofirst timerdquo) or experienced (ldquosecond timerdquo) breeders with or without prior parasite contact were confined with E. opacus at breeding onset, their behaviour recorded and parasite number counted on breeding completion. More first- than second-time breeding pairs completely excluded the parasite and second-time breeders with no prior contact with E. opacus had fewer parasites than any others. These pairs increased burrow-guarding dramatically, mostly during early reproduction, this being the best predictor of parasite number. Prolonged guarding, however, must be traded-off against other brood-care behaviours. Hence, it might pay breeding pairs to take the risk of accepting some parasites breeding within their burrow, and we expect this effect will be more pronounced if poor feeding and digging conditions are taken into account. This might explain why apparently 90% of the P. armaticeps breeding burrows in the field contain at least one parasitic E. opacus.Communicated by D. Gwynne
Keywords:Host-parasite interaction  Parasite discrimination  Host experience  Reproductive success  Tenebrionidae
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