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Influence of host preference, mating, and release density on the parasitism of Telenomus remus (Nixon) (Hymenoptera, Platygastridae)

ABSTRACT

We evaluated the influence of host preference, mating, and release density on Telenomus remus (Nixon, 1937) (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) parasitizing eggs of Spodoptera frugiperda (Smith, 1797) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). First, we tested host preference of T. remus (free choice test) offered a choice between eggs of Corcyra cephalonica (Stainton, 1865) (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) and S. frugiperda. Parasitism capacity and host preference (S. frugiperda) of T. remus reared on either of the two hosts did not differ. Secondly, we evaluated the influence of mating behavior of T. remus females on its parasitism. Only the offspring sex ratio differed between treatments, indicating that the species reproduces by parthenogenesis of the arrhenotoky type. Finally, we evaluated the influence of release density on T. remus parasitism. This was tested by releasing different numbers of the parasitoid per S. frugiperda egg using T. remus reared for different numbers of generations on C. cephalonica eggs. The regression analysis between percentage of parasitism and density of released T. remus females showed a quadratic effect for all tested parasitoid generations (F35, F40, and F45) with maximum parasitism from 65.07% to 71.69%. Our results allow the conclusion that (a) T. remus prefers S. frugiperda eggs, regardless of the host on which this parasitoid was reared, showing no preimaginal conditioning; (b) Mating does not affect the number of eggs parasitized by T. remus or the development of its offspring; and (c) The optimal T. remus release density when reared on C. cephalonica is between 0.133 and 0.150 females/S. frugiperda.

Keywords:
Arrhenotokous parthenogenesis; Optimal number; Phenological stages; Preimaginal conditioning

Introduction

Telenomus remus parasitizes eggs of various species of the order Lepidoptera, many of which are global crop pests ( Cave, 2000Cave, R.D., 2000. Biology, ecology and use in pest management of Telenomus remus. Biocontrol 21, 21-26.). Despite possessing traits favorable for their use as biological control, this parasitoid is currently only reared on a small scale due to the difficulties of rearing it on its natural host Spodoptera frugiperda ( Pomari-Fernandes et al., 2015Pomari-Fernandes, A., Bueno, A.F., Queiroz, A.P., De Bortoli, S.A., 2015. Biological parameters and parasitism capacity of Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) reared on natural and factitious hosts for successive generations. African J. Agric. Res. 10, 3225-3233.). Alternatively, T. remus can be reared on a factitious hosts that may not be the parasitoid's preference but is still adequate for its successful development ( Parra, 1997Parra, J.R.P., 1997. Técnicas de criação de Anagasta kuehniella, hospedeiro alternativo para produção de Trichogramma. In: Parra, J.R.P., Zucchi, R.A. (Eds.), Trichogramma e o Controle Biológico Aplicado. FEALQ/USP, Piracicaba, pp. 121-150.). In this context, Corcyra cephalonica, which can be reared in the laboratory more easily and at a lower cost than S. frugiperda ( Kumar et al., 1986Kumar, D.A., Pawar, A.D., Divakar, B.J., 1986. Mass multiplication of Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) on Corcyra cephalonica Stainton (Lep idoptera: Galleridae). J. Adv. Zool. 7, 21-23.), has been suggested as a possible factitious host of T. remus ( Kumar et al., 1986Kumar, D.A., Pawar, A.D., Divakar, B.J., 1986. Mass multiplication of Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) on Corcyra cephalonica Stainton (Lep idoptera: Galleridae). J. Adv. Zool. 7, 21-23. ; Pomari et al., 2012Pomari, A.F., Bueno, A.D.F., Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Menezes, A.D.O., 2012. Biological characteristics and thermal requirements of the biological control agent Telenomus remus (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) reared on eggs of different species of the genus Spodoptera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am. 105, 73-81.). However, continuous rearing of a parasitoid on a factitious host may affect its parasitism or host preference, and may directly influence its efficiency against the target pest. This is probably due to preimaginal conditioning occurring during larval development (Cobert, 1985Cobert, S.A., 1985. Insect chemosensory responses: a chemical legacy hypothesis. Ecol. Entomol. 10, 143-153.), a biological process which needs further study for T. remus reared on C. cephalonica eggs.

Knowledge of the biology and ecology of insects and their natural enemies is a prerequisite for the success of biological control in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) (Cave, 2000Cave, R.D., 2000. Biology, ecology and use in pest management of Telenomus remus. Biocontrol 21, 21-26.). Adult mating can impact parasitism, and should be taken into account when testing the use of an egg parasitoid in massive field releases (Pratissoli et al., 2009Pratissoli, D., Oliveira, H.N.D., Polanczyk, R.A., Holtz, A.M., Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Bueno, A.D.F., Gonçalvez, J.R., 2009. Adult feeding and mating effects on the biological potential and parasitism of Trichogramma pretiosum and T. acacioi (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Braz. Arch. Biol. Technol. 52, 1057-1062.). Males of T. remus have one larval instar less than females ( Cave, 2000Cave, R.D., 2000. Biology, ecology and use in pest management of Telenomus remus. Biocontrol 21, 21-26.), and therefore emerge earlier than females from the same host egg mass. The newly emerged males guard egg masses to ensure their mating with females as soon as they emerge (Cave, 2000Cave, R.D., 2000. Biology, ecology and use in pest management of Telenomus remus. Biocontrol 21, 21-26.). Because parasitism capacity may differ between mated and unmated T. remus females, the influence of mating at the time of emergence should be assessed prior to adopting the recently developed technology of aerial release of individual pupae close to emergence.

Additionally, superparasitism can decrease the number of parasitized eggs, and may occur when an excessive number of parasitoids per host egg is released (Cave, 2000Cave, R.D., 2000. Biology, ecology and use in pest management of Telenomus remus. Biocontrol 21, 21-26.). Research is needed to test the influence of release density on parasitism with the long-term goal of determining the optimal number of parasitoids to be released into the field (Sá and Parra, 1993Sá, L.A., Parra, J.R.P., 1993. Effect of the number and interval between releases of Trichogramma pretiosum Riley on the parasitism and control of Helicoverpa zea (Boddie) in corn. Sci. Agric. 50, 355-359.). To this end, this study evaluates the influence of host preference, mating, and release density on T. remus parasitism on eggs of S. frugiperda. The results yield crucial information for the success of rearing T. remus and its release in the field.

Material and methods

The studies (bioassay 1 and 2) were carried out under controlled laboratory conditions (25 °C ± 2 °C, relative humidity 80% ± 10%, photoperiod 14/10 h [light/dark]) and in a semifield (greenhouse) (bioassay 3) at Embrapa Soybean, Londrina, State of Paraná, Brazil. This work involved three independent bioassays. In the first bioassay we assessed host preference of the parasitoid T. remus offered a choice between eggs of C. cephalonica and S. frugiperda. In the second bioassay we evaluated the influence of mating on T. remus parasitism of S. frugiperda eggs. In the third bioassay we determined the optimal number of parasitoids to be released for the successful control of S. frugiperda in maize. All hosts and parasitoids used in the experiments were obtained from the rearing laboratory at Embrapa Soybean.

Bioassay 1: host preference of Telenomus remus

All T. remus colonies evaluated in the host preference test originated from insects reared on C. cephalonica eggs at the F40 generation and on S. frugiperda eggs at the F350 generation (Parra, 1997Parra, J.R.P., 1997. Técnicas de criação de Anagasta kuehniella, hospedeiro alternativo para produção de Trichogramma. In: Parra, J.R.P., Zucchi, R.A. (Eds.), Trichogramma e o Controle Biológico Aplicado. FEALQ/USP, Piracicaba, pp. 121-150.) in order to compare the two insect populations. The experiment was carried out in a completely randomized 2 × 2 factorial design (2 parasitoid colonies by 2 host eggs) and 15 replicates. Each replicate consisted of an arena according to Thuler et al. (2007Thuler, R.T., Volpe, H.X.L., de Bortoli, S.A., Goulart, R.M., Viana, C.L.T.P., 2007. Metodologia para avaliação da preferência hospedeira de parasitóides do gênero Trichogramma Westood. Bol. Sanidad Veg. 33, 333-340.): a polyethylene bottle (4 and 2 cm in diameter) for parasitoid release was placed in the middle of the arena around which four tubes (volume 1.5 mL) containing the host specimens were arranged at equal distances.

Approximately 150 eggs of a single host (C. cephalonica or S. frugiperda) were glued to labeled, white cardboard cards (2.5 × 5 cm) with white glue (Tenaz(r)). Two cards per host were individually introduced into the tubes located on opposite sides of the arena. Next, four newly emerged (24 h) T. remus females fed on honey were released into the arena from the central bottle. After 24 h, the cards were removed and placed individually in 1.5 mL Duran tubes until the emergence of adults. At this step, the number of parasitized eggs was recorded.

The results (Table 1) were analyzed for normality (Shapiro and Wilk, 1965) and homogeneity of variance of treatments (Burr and Foster, 1972Burr, I.W., Foster, L.A., 1972. A Test for Equality of Variances. University of Purdue, West Lafayette.) and, whenever necessary, transformed to perform ANOVA. The number of parasitized eggs was transformed by log (x + 1). The treatment means were compared using Tukey's test at a probability level of 5% (SAS Institute, 2009SAS Institute, 2009. SAS User's Guide: Statistics, Version 8e. SAS Institute, Cary, NC. Shapiro, S.S., Wilk, M.B., 1965. An analysys of variance test for normality (complete samples). Biometrika 52, 591-611.).

Table 1
Bioassay 1: number of eggs (Spodoptera frugiperda and Corcyra cephalonica) parasitized by Telenomus remus from different colonies (reared on S. frugiperda and C. cephalonica eggs). Temperature 25 ± 2 °C, relative humidity of 80% ± 10%, and the photoperiod of 14/10 h (light/dark).

Means (±SE) followed by identical upper-case letters within a row (different parasitoid colonies), and lower-case letters within a column (different egg hosts) did not statistically differ according to Tukey's Studentized range test at 5% probability. Original data followed by statistics performed on data transformed in log (x + 1).

Bioassay 2: influence of parasitoid mating on its parasitism

Mated and unmated T. remus females reared on C. cephalonica eggs (F40 generation) were offered eggs of S. frugiperda for a 24 h period. Each female was placed in a Duran type tube (1.5 mL) containing a droplet of honey as food, and offered approximately 100 S. frugiperda eggs (up to 24 h old) glued to white cardboard cards (2.5 × 5 cm) (six replicates per treatment). Afterwards, cards were removed and placed individually in Duran-type tubes until the emergence of adults. The number of parasitized eggs, parasitoid emergence (%), sex ratio, and longevity of parental females was recorded. The results (Table 2) were analyzed for normality (Shapiro and Wilk, 1965) and homogeneity of variance of treatments (Burr and Foster, 1972Burr, I.W., Foster, L.A., 1972. A Test for Equality of Variances. University of Purdue, West Lafayette.) and, whenever necessary, transformed to perform ANOVA. The number of parasitized eggs was transformed by log (x + 1) and parasitoid emergence (%) transformed by arcsin. Then, treatment means were compared by Tukey's test at a probability level of 5% (SAS Institute, 2009SAS Institute, 2009. SAS User's Guide: Statistics, Version 8e. SAS Institute, Cary, NC. Shapiro, S.S., Wilk, M.B., 1965. An analysys of variance test for normality (complete samples). Biometrika 52, 591-611.).

Table 2
Bioassay 2: biological parameters of mated and unmated Telenomus remus females (from Corcyra cephalonica eggs) that parasitized Spodoptera frugiperda eggs. [Temperature of 25 ± 2 °C, relative humidity of 80% ± 10%, and the photoperiod of 14/10 h (light/dark).].

Bioassay 3: influence of T. remus release density on its parasitism

The influence of the release density of T. remus on its parasitism was determined by releasing different numbers of T. remus in relation to a given number of eggs of S. frugiperda, using T. remus reared for a different number of generations (F35, F40, and F45) on C. cephalonica eggs. We chose T. remus reared on C. cephalonica eggs because this parasitoid is planned to be released in the field on a large scale for biological control programs. An independent trial was carried out for each parasitoid generation under greenhouse conditions, using a fully randomized experimental design with ten treatments (0, 0.017, 0.033, 0.050, 0.067, 0.083, 0.100, 0.117, 0.133, and 0.150 T. remus females per S. frugiperda egg) and five replicates.

Eggs of the pest species were obtained from laboratory rearing and exposed to treatments inside iron-framed cages (40 cm × 40 cm × 120 cm) covered with voile fabric in each replicate. A pot of 40-cm diameter with two hybrid IPR 114 maize plants was placed inside each of these cages, attaching a white cardboard card with 150 eggs to the whorl of each plant. Different numbers (5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40 and 45) of previously mated females (Pomari et al., 2013Pomari, A.F., Bueno, A.D.F., Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Junior, M., de Oliveiras, A., Fonseca, A.C.P.F., 2013. Releasing number of Telenomus remus (Nixon) (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) against Spodoptera frugiperda Smith (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in corn, cotton and soybean. Ciência Rural 43, 377-382.) were released, representing the proportions of 0.017, 0.033, 0.050, 0.067, 0.083, 0.100, 0.117, 0.133, and 0.150 T. remus females per S. frugiperda egg. No parasitoids were released in the control treatment. Parasitism was allowed for 24 h, and temperature and humidity were recorded using a digital data logger (Instrutherm HT-500) (Table 3). Next, eggs were collected and maintained in Petri dishes at 25 °C until they darkened and parasitoids emerged for subsequent evaluation. We recorded total percent of parasitism per replicate. This procedure was repeated at various developmental stages of the plants (V2/V3, V4/V5, and V8/V9 according to Magalhães and Durães, 2006Magalhães, P.C., Durães, F.O.M., 2006. Fisiologia da Produção de Milho. Embrapa milho e Sorgo. Circular técnico.) because different leaf surfaces might provide different sizes of area for a parasitoid to find eggs and therefore may impact its parasitism. The average parasitism observed for each parasitoid density during different plant stages was used in the analyses (Fig. 1). The number of T. remus females per egg of S. frugiperda and percentage of parasitism were used in a regression analysis ( SAS Institute, 2009). Parasitism data was analyzed for normality (Shapiro and Wilk, 1965) and homogeneity of variance of treatments (Burr and Foster, 1972Burr, I.W., Foster, L.A., 1972. A Test for Equality of Variances. University of Purdue, West Lafayette.), and whenever necessary transformed to perform ANOVA. Parasitism values of T. remus generations F40 and F45 were transformed by (x + 1)0.5. The treatment means were then compared by Tukey's test at a probability level of 5% (SAS Institute, 2009SAS Institute, 2009. SAS User's Guide: Statistics, Version 8e. SAS Institute, Cary, NC. Shapiro, S.S., Wilk, M.B., 1965. An analysys of variance test for normality (complete samples). Biometrika 52, 591-611.).

Table 3
Weather data recorded by a data Logger during bioassay 3 (influence of the T. remus release density on its parasitism).

Fig. 1.
Bioassay 3: parasitism (%) in Spodoptera frugiperda eggs after the release of different densities of Telenomus remus per host egg using parasitoids from different colonies. T. remus reared on Corcyra cephalonica for 35 generations (A), 40 generations (B) and 45 generations (C). Average values from trials repeated at maize at V2/V3, V4/V5 and V8/V9 development stage.

Results

Bioassay 1: host preference of Telenomus remus

There was no interaction between T. remus colonies (T. remus reared on C. cephalonica or S. frugiperda eggs) and parasitized hosts (C. cephalonica or S. frugiperda) (p parasitoid*host = 0.1950, F parasitoid*host = 1.73) (Table 1). Telenomus remus reared on C. cephalonica eggs and S. frugiperda eggs exhibited similar parasitism capacity regardless of the host species they were reared on. The number of parasitized eggs was similar for both parasitoid colonies (48.32 and 40.53 eggs for parasitoids reared on C. cephalonica and S. frugiperda, respectively, p parasitoid = 0.2161, F parasitoid = 1.57) (Table 1). In contrast, higher numbers of S. frugiperda eggs (87.96) were parasitized compared with C. cephalonica eggs (1.19) (p host < 0.0001, F host = 259.46) (Table 1), indicating a clear preference for S. frugiperda eggs regardless of the host the parasitoid was reared on.

Bioassay 2: influence of parasitoid mating on its parasitism

No differences were found between mated and unmated females with respect to the number of parasitized eggs, parasitoid emergence (%) and longevity of parental females (days) (Table 2). In contrast, offspring sex ratio differed between treatments (0.61 for mated females and 0.00 for unmated females, Table 2), indicating that T. remus reproduces parthenogenetically with characteristics of the arrhenotoky type.

Bioassay 3: influence of the release density of T. remus on its parasitism

For S. frugiperda eggs attached to maize leaves, we found a quadratic effect for the regression analysis between the percentage of parasitism and density of released T. remus females (number of parasitoid per pest egg) in all parasitoid generations tested ( Fig. 1). Maximum parasitism was 71.69%, 71.69%, and 65.07% for F35, F40, and F45, respectively. The maximum parasitism rate was reached at densities between 0.133 and 0.150 of T. remus females per S. frugiperda egg ( Fig. 1). Throughout the study, climatic data were recorded with a data logger at greenhouse conditions. Differences in temperature and relative humidity between all evaluated growth stages are shown in Table 3.

Discussion

Parasitoid rearing on factitious hosts is essential for the success of its mass release in augmentative biological control programs (Bueno et al., 2008Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Carneiro, T.R., Pratissoli, D., Bueno, A.D.F., Fernandes, O.A., 2008. Biology and thermal requirements of Telenomus remus reared on fall armyworm Spodoptera frugiperda eggs. Ciência Rural 38, 1-6.) and requires the establishment of procedures to monitor the quality of the produced insect. According to Cobert (1985Cobert, S.A., 1985. Insect chemosensory responses: a chemical legacy hypothesis. Ecol. Entomol. 10, 143-153.), continuous rearing of parasitoids on factitious hosts can cause the loss of their ability to recognize and choose a host and therefore reduce their efficiency against the targeted pest species. In our study, this negative effect was not observed for T. remus reared on C. cephalonica eggs. Parasitism of eggs of the target field pest (S. frugiperda) was similar in parasitoid females reared on both C. cephalonica and S. frugiperda. However, the influence of the factitious host on parasitoid quality might also depend on the number of generations the parasitoid is reared on the same host. Pratissoli et al. (2004Pratissoli, D., Oliveira, H.N., Gonçalves, J.R., Zanuncio, J.C., Holtz, A.M., 2004. Changes in biological characteristics of Trichogramma pretiosum (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) reared on eggs of Anagasta kuehniella (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) for 23 generations. Biocontrol Sci. Technol. 14, 313-319.) reported that parasitism capacity of species reared on factious hosts was inversely proportional to the number of generations for which they were kept on the same host species in the laboratory. Therefore, quality control must assess parasitism capacity of all generations throughout parasitoid rearing. We observed similar parasitism for T. remus on S. frugiperda regardless of the origin of the parasitoid (reared on either C. cephalonica or S. frugiperda eggs) even after rearing it on C. cephalonica eggs for 45 generations (F45 generation). These results highlight the potential of C. cephalonica as a factitious host for T. remus rearing.

In addition, S. frugiperda eggs continued to be preferred by T. remus reared on C. cephalonica eggs in the free-choice test supporting the hypothesis that it constitutes an adequate factitious host. This result also suggests that the host acceptance behavior of T. remus females cannot be attributed to experience acquired during larval development (preimaginal conditioning) as previously described by Cobert (1985Cobert, S.A., 1985. Insect chemosensory responses: a chemical legacy hypothesis. Ecol. Entomol. 10, 143-153.) and Kaiser et al. (1989Kaiser, L., Pham-Delegue, M.H., Masson, C., 1989. Behavioural study of plasticity in host preferences of Trichogramma maidis (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Physiol. Entomol. 14, 53-60.) and more recently by Pomari-Fernandes et al. (2015Pomari-Fernandes, A., Bueno, A.F., Queiroz, A.P., De Bortoli, S.A., 2015. Biological parameters and parasitism capacity of Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) reared on natural and factitious hosts for successive generations. African J. Agric. Res. 10, 3225-3233.). Our finding also excludes learning or α-conditioning, where females associate new stimuli (acquired) with innate stimuli and thus can adapt their behavior to the environment in which they lived as adults or young individuals ( Kaiser et al., 1989Kaiser, L., Pham-Delegue, M.H., Masson, C., 1989. Behavioural study of plasticity in host preferences of Trichogramma maidis (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Physiol. Entomol. 14, 53-60. ; Nurindah et al., 1999Nurindah, G.G., Cribb, B.W., Gordh, G., 1999. Effects of physiological condition and experience on oviposition behaviour of Trichogramma australicum Girault (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) on eggs of Helicoverpa armigera Hubner (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). Aust. J. Entomol. 38, 104-114.). The absence of preimaginal conditioning or learning was previously reported for T. remus reared on S. frugiperda eggs and, when tested for different hosts (S. frugiperda versus S. cosmioides, S. frugiperda vs. S. albula, and S. cosmioides vs. S. albula) this species preferred S. cosmioides as a host ( Goulart et al., 2011Goulart, M.M.P., Bueno, A.D.F., Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Diniz, A.F., 2011. Host preference of the egg parasitoids Telenomus remus and Trichogramma pretiosum in laboratory. Rev. Bras. Entomol. 55, 129-133.). This supports the use of T. remus in biological control because of the possibility of rearing it on a single host for several generations without reducing its effectiveness against different target pests in the field.

This host preference of T. remus is probably related to the nutritional quality of the host. Adding more complexity to this phenomenon, Molina et al. (2005Molina, R.M., Fronza, V., Parra, J.R., 2005. Seleção de Trichogramma spp., para o controle de Ecdytolopha aurantiana, com base na biologia e exigências térmicas. Rev. Bras. Entomol. 49, 152-158.) claim that not only the nutritional quality of the future host but also of the previous host on which the parasitoid was reared might influence host preference. Egg surface, color and other traits of the host can also influence host preference in a more complex decision-making process (Cônsoli et al., 1999Cônsoli, F.L., Kitajima, E.W., Parra, J.R.P., 1999. Ultrastructure of the natural and factitious host eggs of Trichogramma galho Zucchi and Trichogramma pretiosum Riley (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Int. J. Insect Morphol. Embryol. 28, 211-231.). However, the preference of T. remus for S. frugiperda eggs when reared on C. cephalonica may be more closely related to the superior nutritional value of S. frugiperda compared to C. cephalonica.

The importance of adult mating must also be considered when rearing T. remus, because it can compromise the maintenance of the parasitoid in the field ( Pratissoli et al., 2009Pratissoli, D., Oliveira, H.N.D., Polanczyk, R.A., Holtz, A.M., Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Bueno, A.D.F., Gonçalvez, J.R., 2009. Adult feeding and mating effects on the biological potential and parasitism of Trichogramma pretiosum and T. acacioi (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). Braz. Arch. Biol. Technol. 52, 1057-1062. ; Farrokhi et al., 2010Farrokhi, S., Ashouri, A., Shirazi, J., Allahyari, H., Huigens, M.E., 2010. A comparative study on the functional response of Wolbachia-infected and uninfected forms of the parasitoid wasp Trichogramma brassicae. J. Insect Sci. 10, 167.). A recent strategy to release egg parasitoids in the field has been to use isolated pupae that are sprayed on plants, for example of Trichogramma spp. in Brazil. However, males of T. remus which emerge earlier than females due to their shorter lifecycle await females to emerge from the same parasitized egg mass ( Cave, 2000Cave, R.D., 2000. Biology, ecology and use in pest management of Telenomus remus. Biocontrol 21, 21-26.), allowing for high mating rates directly after emergence. Therefore, the spraying of T. remus individual pupae in the field could negatively impact the reproductive behavior of the parasitoid, highlighting the importance of evaluating mating deprivation.

The absence of mating directly influenced offspring sex ratio, leading to the production of males only. However, other biological parameters were not affected. The observed reproduction mode of T. remus via parthenogenesis of the arrhenotoky type (i.e. fertilized females give rise to diploid females, whereas unfertilized females give rise to haploid males), has been described as the most common reproductive type for insects of the order Hymenoptera ( Pratissoli et al., 2014Pratissoli, D., Kloss, T.G., Zinger, F.D., Carvalho, J.R., Vianna, U.R., Paes, J.P., 2014. Does mating interfere in the biological characteristics of a population of Trichogramma pretiosum? Anais Acad. Bras. Ciênc. 86, 459-464.).

In contrast to sex ratio, the numbers of parasitized eggs per mated and unmated female were similar, as well as parasitoid emergence (%) and longevity of parental females. It should be noted that in our study the longevity of the parental females was similar to that observed for T. remus of generation F19 reared on C. cephalonica eggs as reported by Pomari-Fernandes et al. (2015Pomari-Fernandes, A., Bueno, A.F., Queiroz, A.P., De Bortoli, S.A., 2015. Biological parameters and parasitism capacity of Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) reared on natural and factitious hosts for successive generations. African J. Agric. Res. 10, 3225-3233.). These results differ from Pratissoli et al. (2014Pratissoli, D., Kloss, T.G., Zinger, F.D., Carvalho, J.R., Vianna, U.R., Paes, J.P., 2014. Does mating interfere in the biological characteristics of a population of Trichogramma pretiosum? Anais Acad. Bras. Ciênc. 86, 459-464.) who observed an influence of mating on female longevity of the egg parasitoid Trichogramma pretiosum (Riley, 1879) (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae). In addition, Stouthamer (1993Stouthamer, R., 1993. The use of sexual versus asexual wasps in biological control. BioControl 38, 3-6.) reports that field releases of parasitoids (genus Trichogramma) reproducing by parthenogenesis of the thelytoky type were more efficient compared with parasitoids with those reproducing by parthenogenesis of the arrhenotoky type, illustrating the importance of studying the reproductive mode of each parasitoid species.

Our results suggests that although parasitism of T. remus, and therefore its control efficiency, was not affected by mating, parasitoid permanence in the field may be impacted when unmated females are released. Some studies reported the failure to establish T. remus in the field after its release ( Van Waddill and Whitcomb, 1982Van Waddill, H., Whitcomb, W.H., 1982. Release of Telenomus remus (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) against Spodoptera frugiperda (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in Florida, USA. Entomophaga 27, 159-162. ; Figueiredo et al., 1999Figueiredo, M.L.C., Cruz, I., Della Lucia, M.T., 1999. Controle integrado de Spodoptera frugiperda (Smith) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) utilizando-se o parasitóide Telenomus remus (Nixon) (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae). Pesq. Agropec. Bras. 34, 1975-1982.). Since additional release might be always necessary when pest population increase, the releasing of mated females might not be important considering that the parasitism of the available eggs in the field would be the same (Carneiro et al., 2009Carneiro, T.R., Fernandes, O.A., Cruz, I., 2009. Influência da competição intraespecífica entre fêmeas e da ausência de hospedeiro no parasitismo de Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera, Scelionidae) sobre ovos de Spodoptera frugiperda (J.E. Smith) (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Rev. Bras. Entomol. 53, 482-486.).

Additionally, the success of T. remus as biological control depends on the appropriate parasitoid density per S. frugiperda egg which can be evaluated by releasing different numbers of parasitoids in relation to a given number of pest eggs. We studied parasitoid release in maize, using different densities of T. remus females of the F35, F40, and F45 generation. Parasitism of females of all tested generations was positively related to the density of females per S. frugiperda egg, reaching maximum parasitism between 0.133 and 0.150 T. remus/S. frugiperda egg (40-45 T. remus females per 300 eggs of S. frugiperda). In a similar study, the optimal density was almost 50% less than in our study (25 T. remus females/300 S. frugiperda eggs of T. remus reared on S. frugiperda reported by Pomari et al., 2013Pomari, A.F., Bueno, A.D.F., Bueno, R.C.O.D.F., Junior, M., de Oliveiras, A., Fonseca, A.C.P.F., 2013. Releasing number of Telenomus remus (Nixon) (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) against Spodoptera frugiperda Smith (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in corn, cotton and soybean. Ciência Rural 43, 377-382.). Given that parasitism can strongly depend on the parasitoid species and/or strains (Sá and Parra, 1993), these discrepancies may be due to different parasitoid colonies used in both trials. The rearing of T. remus on C. cephalonica eggs for many generations seems to generate parasitoids with lower parasitism capacity compared with those reared on S. frugiperda eggs, requiring a higher density of T. remus females to effectively control the pest. Although a greater number of parasitoids per pest egg are needed when the parasitoid is reared on a factitious host, several other factors, such as the ease of rearing and low cost of the parasitoid, should be considered. Overall, our results allow the conclusion that (a) T. remus prefers to parasitize S. frugiperda to C. cephalonica eggs, despite the absence of preimaginal conditioning; (b) mating does not affect parasitism capacity and development of T. remus; (c) the optimal release density of T. remus reared on C. cephalonica is between 0.133 and 0.150 females/S. frugiperda eggs, which is higher than the optimal release density of T. remus reared on its natural host S. frugiperda. These results importantly contribute to existing knowledge on the successful rearing of and field release strategies for T. remus.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Embrapa Soja and the sponsor agencies CAPES and CNPq for their financial support and scholarships. This paper was approved for publication by the Editorial Board of Embrapa Soja.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Jan-Mar 2017

History

  • Received
    06 Sept 2016
  • Reviewed
    16 Dec 2016
  • Accepted
    29 Dec 2016
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