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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: its host + host + parasitoid  Related to the article below (Last Update: 6/5/2008)


ScienceBlogs
Parasitoid Turns Its Host Into A Bodyguard
Science Daily (press release) - Jun 4, 2008
Unlike many other combinations of host and parasitoid, the host remains alive but displays spectacular changes in its behaviour: it stops feeding and ...
A blog about life, past and future ScienceBlogs
Zombie babysitters Science News
Head-banging caterpillars ScienceBlogs
all 9 news articles »

World Science
Parasite turns host into bodyguard
World Science, NY -
It?s unclear how the wasp changes the behaviour of its host. But interestingly, the investigators said, one or two parasitoid larvae normally remained ...
Parasitoid wasps turn caterpillar hosts into 'bodyguards'
The Cheers, Estonia -
The researchers admitted that it was yet to be discerned how the parasitoid changed the behaviour of its host. They, however, guess that perhaps the one or ...
Infected Caterpillar Species Protects Parasite's Young
Medical News Today, UK - Jun 4, 2008
A parasitoid has been described that turns its host into a bodyguard for its young, thus improving the chances of further transmission, released in a study ...
Zombie caterpillars controlled by voodoo wasps New Scientist (subscription)
all 2 news articles »
Animal behaviour Naughty nesters
Economist, UK - May 8, 2008
New research suggests the cuckoo has another trick it uses to ruffle its victims' feathers. Common cuckoos usually lay a single egg in the nest of a host ...
In Nature: It's true: Flies are our friends
BurlingtonFreePress.com, VT - May 23, 2008
With so many hosts available, the fly population builds and builds. Finally, parasitism becomes so heavy that caterpillar numbers crash. ...
One Giant Leap: How Insects Achieved Altruism and Colonial Life
RedOrbit, TX - Jun 4, 2008
Local migration promotes competitive restraint in a host-pathogen 'tragedy of the commons.' Nature 442:75-79. Krieger MJB, Ross KG. 2002. ...
Ash-Killing Insect Spreads Eastward; Researchers Focus on Natural ...
Pallet Enterprise, VA - May 31, 2008
Its use may be limited, however, to saving individual trees. Tree-age, developed jointly by Swiss agrochemical company Syngenta and Massachusetts-based ...
Sovereignty and poverty - IMF and World Bank in Ethiopia
Ethiopian Review, DC - May 29, 2008
The Ethiopia we know of is in the middle of one of its recurring famines with over 12 million people needing immediate help. Even by the governments own ...
Influence of Green Leaf Herbivory By Manduca Sexta on Floral ...
RedOrbit, TX - May 27, 2008
Native host plants are Nicotiana attenuata (Voelckel and Baldwin, 2004), Datura wrightii (Mira and Bernays, 2002), and the more recently discovered ...
Source: Google News

Regulation and stability of host-parasite population interactions. I. Regulatory processes
RM Anderson, RM May - Journal of Animal Ecology, 1978 - JSTOR
... (3) The parameters influencing the ability of the parasite to regulate the growth
of its host's population, and the stability of parasite induced equilibria ...

… attract the larval parasitoid, Cotesia marginiventris (Cresson), to the microhabitat of one of its -
TCJ Turlings, JH Tumlinson, RR Heath, AT Proveaux, … - Journal of Chemical Ecology, 1991 - Springer
... The response to a particular odor blend dramatically increases after a parasitoid
experiences it in association with contacting host by-products. ...

Aggregation of Risk: Relationships Among Host-Parasitoid Models -
PL Chesson, WW Murdoch - American Naturalist, 1986 - UChicago Press
... Antolin, DR Strong. (1987) Long-distance dispersal by a parasitoid (Anagrus
delicatus, Mymaridae) and its host. Oecologia 73:2, 288. ...

Competition Among Parasitoid Species on a Stage-Structured Host and Its Effect on Host Suppression -
CJ Briggs - American Naturalist, 1993 - UChicago Press
... 141, pp. 372 DOI: 10.1086/285479. Competition Among Parasitoid Species on a
Stage-Structured Host and Its Effect on Host Suppression. Cheryl J. Briggs. Cited ...

The spatial dynamics of host-parasitoid systems. -
HN Comins, MP Hassell, RM May - Journal of Animal Ecology, 1992 - JSTOR
... The immature stages of these insects are hosts for a specialist parasitoid species
whose life cycle is synchronized with that of its host. ...

Phylogenetic evidence for horizontal transmission of Wolbachia in host-parasitoid associations -
F Vavre - Molecular Biology and Evolution, 1999 - SMBE
... L. boulardi proved to be totally Wolbachia- free despite its high exposure ... process
of horizontal trans- fer be generalized to other host-parasitoid associations ...

GENETIC VARIATION IN A HOST-PARASITE ASSOCIATION: POTENTIAL FOR COEVOLUTION AND FREQUENCY-DEPENDENT … -
HJ Carius, TJ Little, D Ebert - Evolution, 2001 - bioone.org
... Find this article online; Ebert D. 1995. The ecological interactions between a
microsporidian parasite and its host Daphnia magna. J. Anim. Ecol. 64:361?369. ...

The Frequency of Density Dependence in Insect Host-Parasitoid Systems -
PD Stiling - Ecology, 1987 - JSTOR
... The responses of the aquatic parasitoid Agriotypus armatus (Hymenoptera: Agrioptypidae)
to the spatial distribution and density of its caddis host Silo pal ...

Nutritional Ecology of an Insect Host-Parasitoid Association: The Pea Aphid-Aphidius Ervi System -
R Sequeira, M Mackauer - Ecology, 1992 - JSTOR
... Vinson, SB 1972. Effect of the parasitoid Campoletis sono- rensis on the growth
of its host, Heliothis virescens. Journal of Insect Physiology 18:1509-1514. ...

Host-parasitoid systems in patchy environments: a phenomenological model -
RM May - Journal of Animal Ecology, 1978 - JSTOR
... parasitology. Secondly, the host-parasitoid model itself is presented, and its
equilibrium and stability properties are laid bare. Following ...

Source: Google Scholar

Parasitoid turns its host into a bodyguard

There are many examples of parasites that induce spectacular changes in the behaviour of their host. Flukes, for example, are thought to induce ants, their intermediate host, to move up onto blades of grass during the night and early morning. There, they firmly attach themselves to the substrate with their mandibles, and are thus consumed by grazing sheep, the fluke's final host. In contrast, uninfected ants return to their nests during the night and the cooler parts of the day. As another example, terrestrial insects parasitized by hairworms commit suicide by jumping into water, where the adult worms reproduce.

Behavioural changes like these are thought to be induced by the parasite so as to increase its transmission to the final host, but there are alternative explanations. It is possible, for example, that the hosts already behaved differently before becoming infected. Hence, infection is a consequence of different behaviour, not its cause. Increased transmission can also be called into question: the behavioural changes of the host may result in increased attacks by other non-host animals, and this would seriously decrease the probability of transmission. Increased transmission should therefore always be tested under natural conditions.

In a recent publication in the online, open-access journal PLoS ONE, a research team from University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and the Federal University of Vi?osa, Brazil, led by Arne Janssen, now offer evidence that behavioural changes of a host are indeed beneficial to the parasite in the field. In research supported by WOTRO, carried out in Brazil, they studied a moth, the caterpillars of which feed on leaves of the native guava tree and on an exotic eucalyptus. Small caterpillars are attacked by an insect parasitoid wasp, which then quickly inserts up to 80 eggs into it.

Inside the caterpillar host, a cruel drama takes place: the eggs of the parasitoid hatch and the larvae feed on the body fluids of the host. The caterpillar continues feeding, moving and growing like its unparasitized brothers and sisters. When the parasitoid larvae are full-grown, they emerge together through the host's skin, and start pupating nearby. Unlike many other combinations of host and parasitoid, the host remains alive but displays spectacular changes in its behaviour: it stops feeding and remains close to the parasitoid pupae (see photo). Moreover, it defends the parasitoid pupae against approaching predators with violent head-swings (see movies of predatory bug attack in the article at PLoS ONE).

The caterpillar dies soon after the adult parasitoids emerge from their pupae, so there can be no benefit whatsoever for the caterpillars. In contrast, unparasitized caterpillars do not show any of these behavioural changes, but continue feeding and developing into adults. The research team found that, in the field, parasitoid pupae which were guarded by caterpillars suffered half as much predation as those which had no bodyguard. Hence, the behavioural changes of the host result in increased survival of the parasitoids due to the host that acts as a bodyguard of the parasitoid pupae.

Whereas it is still unclear how the parasitoid changes the behaviour of its host, it is tempting to speculate. The research team found that one or two parasitoid larvae remained behind in the host. Perhaps these larvae affect the behaviour of the caterpillar, and sacrifice themselves for the good of their brothers and sisters.

###

Contact:

Arne Janssen
Email: janssen@science.uva.nl

Grosman AH, Janssen A, de Brito EF, Cordeiro EG, Colares F, et al. (2008) Parasitoid Increases Survival of Its Pupae by Inducing Hosts to Fight Predators. PLoS ONE 3(6): e2276. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0002276

The correct URL is http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0002276 [This appears in the section: PLEASE ADD THE LINK TO THE PUBLISHED ARTICLE IN ONLINE VERSIONS OF YOUR REPORT (URL live from June 4): http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0002276]

PRESS-ONLY PREVIEW: http://www.plos.org/press/pone-03-06-janssen.pdf

Related image for press use: http://www.plos.org/press/pone-03-06-janssen.tif (Caption: A caterpillar of the geometrid moth Thyrinteina leucocerae with pupae of the Braconid parasitoid wasp Glyptapanteles sp. Full-grown larvae of the parasitoid egress from the caterpillar and spin cocoons close by their host. The host remains alive, stops feeding and moving, spins silk over the pupae, and responds to disturbance with violent head-swings (supporting information). The caterpillar dies soon after the adult parasitoids emerge from the pupae. Photograph by Prof. Jos? Lino-Neto. This image forms part of the published paper and is covered by a Creative Commons Attribution License. Any use should include citation of the authors and paper as the original source.)


 

 
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