PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Oviposition behaviour of mated or unmated Cleruchoides noackae (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae).

  • Luciane Katarine Becchi,
  • Carolina Jorge,
  • Gabriella Ferreira de Camargo,
  • Leonardo Rodrigues Barbosa,
  • Marcus Alvarenga Soares,
  • José Eduardo Serrão,
  • José Cola Zanuncio,
  • Carlos Frederico Wilcken

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239285
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
p. e0239285

Abstract

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Cleruchoides noackae (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae), native to Australia, is the most promising biological control agent for Thaumastocoris peregrinus (Hemiptera: Thaumastocoridae), an exotic Eucalyptus spp. pest in Brazil. The aim of this study was to determine the courtship behaviour, mating and oviposition of unmated or mated C. noackae females parasitizing T. peregrinus eggs utilizing the same rearing system used in biological control programmes in Brazil. The mating behaviour of eleven C. noackae unmated couples was observed and the time taken for males and females to find each other in polystyrene vials and the duration and number of copulations were recorded. Ten unmated or mated females were placed individually in vials with 10 T. peregrinus eggs each, and oviposition behaviour, percentage of eggs inserted and parasitized, viability and sex ratio of emerged C. noackae were recorded. This species lacked defined courtship behaviour and mated in less than an hour after adults' emergence. The time spent finding the first host, evaluating and inserting the ovipositor was similar for mated and unmated C. noackae females, as well as the frequency of inserted and parasitized eggs and their viability. Mated females took less time to find other host eggs and the sex ratio is female-biased. Occurrence of arrhenotokous parthenogenesis was confirmed. The ability of C. noackae to mate and lay eggs in less than one hour and parasitism of T. peregrinus eggs by females can improve the parasitoid mass rearing and biological control of T. peregrinus.