The Effects of Parasitoid Behavior
BioBriefs
The Effects of Parasitoid Behavior
CONTROLLING IMPORTED FIRE ANTS
lion acres in central and southeastern
Texas. Gilbert refers to the establishment
of P. tricuspis in Texas as “getting to first
base.” This phorid species has not been
able to adapt to some areas, such as
southern Texas, and the consensus is that
“the entire complementary suite of
phorid species may be required to reduce the pest status of red imported fire
ants,” he says.
Three other phorid species have been
released within the last few years: Pseudacteon curvatus, which parasitizes small
ants and hybrids; Pseudacteon litoralis,
which attacks medium-large to large ants;
and Pseudacteon obtusus, the females of
which can develop in a wide size range of
ants (the sex determination of other
phorid species depends on host head
size, with larger heads required to produce females). Ant studies in South
America show that it takes five to six
phorid species to keep a fire ant species
in check in its native habitat. “It is notoriously difficult to understand ant population dynamics,” says Gilbert, and
“other factors like climate are involved in
complicated ways.” (For more on imported fire ants, see http://uts.cc.utexas.
edu/~gilbert/research/fireants/.)
QUIETING HAWAIIAN CRICKETS
In Hawaii, an introduced species of field
cricket (Teleogryllus oceanicus) has encountered a species of parasitoid that is
acoustically oriented to the mating calls
of male crickets. The parasitoid fly
(Ormia ochracea) co-occurs with the
cricket populations of three islands:
Kauai, Oahu, and Hawaii.
Marlene Zuk, John Rotenberry, and
Robin Tinghitella, biologists from the
University of California–Riverside, have
been studying the impact of parasitoids
952 BioScience • November 2006 / Vol. 56 No. 11
on the cricket populations of the three
islands. On their field trips to Kauai,
where the tachinid fly’s prevalence has
been the highest, the researchers heard
fewer male crickets calling each year from
1991 on, and by 2001 they had difficulty
finding any crickets.
Although no cricket calls were heard
on their visit in 2003, the scientists found
a healthy—but silent—population of
field crickets. Zuk’s team discovered that,
in under 20 generations, the cricket population on Kauai had undergone a startling adaptive response to the parasitoid:
90 percent of males have a wing mutation
(“flatwing”) preventing them from making a sound. The mutation has not been
found in the cricket populations on the
other islands.
The researchers performed experiments to determine how males with the
flatwing mutation manage to mate when
they can’t signal to females where to find
them. When the courtship song was
played over a speaker in an area cleared
of crickets, flatwing males responded
more quickly and drew closer to the
speaker than did normal-winged males.
Females were observed mating with the
flatwings in the experiments, suggesting
that females either don’t require the
courtship song to mate or have become
less choosy.
For now, the small number of normalwinged males still present in the Kauai
population is calling for the whole population, and crickets of both sexes are
drawn to the calling males to mate. (To
read the study, see the 19 September
issue of Biology Letters.)
Cathy Lundmark (e-mail: ).
www.biosciencemag.org
For over 60 years now, black imported fire
ants (Solenopsis richteri) and the even
more aggressive red imported fire ants
(Solenopsis invicta) have been spreading
through the American South. It was while
surveying the ant species of Alabama as
a high school student that Harvard University professor and myrmecologist E. O.
Wilson first discovered the invasion of fire
ants from South America.
Scientists at two research centers,
Brackenridge Field Laboratory in Austin,
Texas, and the USDA-ARS Center for
Medical, Agricultural, and Veterinary Entomology in Gainesville, Florida, have
looked to the ants’ native ecosystems for
the key to controlling them in the United
States. In Argentina and Brazil, the researchers have found over a dozen species
of phorid fly parasitoids that attack the
native South American fire ants. Female
flies inject worker ants with eggs that develop inside the ants and ultimately decapitate them, while male flies harass the
ants, eliciting an alarm response and disrupting ant productivity.
Both Sanford Porter’s group in Florida
and Lawrence Gilbert’s group at the University of Texas–Austin have imported
several species of phorids and studied
them for their potential in the biocontrol
of imported fire ants. The first phorid
species released, Pseudacteon tricuspis, is
one of the more generalized phorid
species; it attacks medium and mediumlarge imported fire ants but leaves the
native US species of fire ant unscathed.
P. tricuspis was released in Florida in 1997
and in Texas in 1999.
Initially released in several locations in
central Texas, P. tricuspis has spread 3 to
10 miles per year from the initial release
sites to an area encompassing over 4 mil-
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