We examined the interaction between an invertebrate iridescent virus (IIV) isolated from Spodoptera frugiperda (J.E. Smith) and the solitary ichneumonid endoparasitoid Eiphosoma vitticolle Cresson. In choice tests, parasitoids examined and stung significantly more virus infected than healthy larvae, apparently due to a lack of defense reaction in virus infected hosts. Parasitoid-mediated virus transmission was observed in 100% of the female parasitoids that stung a virus infected host in the laboratory. Each female parasitoid transmitted the virus to an average (AESE) of 3:7 AE 0:3 larvae immediately after stinging an infected larva. Caged field experiments supported this result; virus transmission to healthy larvae only occurred in cages containing infected hosts (as inoculum) and parasitoids (as vectors). The virus was highly detrimental to parasitoid development because of premature host death and lethal infection of the developing endoparasitoid. Female parasitoids that emerged from virus infected hosts did not transmit the virus to healthy hosts. We suggest that the polyphagous habits of many noctuid parasitoids combined with the catholic host range of most IIVs may represent a mechanism for the transmission of IIVs between different host species in the field.
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