2019
DOI: 10.1111/eth.12870
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To mate or not to mate, and subsequent host search by a haplodiploid female parasitoid wasp

Abstract: Mated females of haplodiploid species can vary the sex ratio of their offspring, but virgin or sperm‐depleted females can produce only males. Depending on the costs and benefits, the theory of constrained sex allocation states that female haplodiploids may vary in their propensity to mate, with important implications for the populations’ sex ratio. Unmated female parasitoid wasps Alabagrus texanus (Braconidae) have been observed to reject matings with males, even under highly confined spatial conditions. We pe… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This result raises the possibility that only high-condition males are choosy. That result is not surprising, however, given the widespread necessity of Alabagrus (Chhan & Morse, 2019) and other parasitoid wasps (Thompson, 1986;Casas, 1989) to initiate physical contact with a host or substrate in decision-making. However, it remains unclear why some male Alabagrus initially attracted to a female either left a female's leaf or even failed to land on her leaf, rather than physically contact her.…”
Section: Condition Indexmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This result raises the possibility that only high-condition males are choosy. That result is not surprising, however, given the widespread necessity of Alabagrus (Chhan & Morse, 2019) and other parasitoid wasps (Thompson, 1986;Casas, 1989) to initiate physical contact with a host or substrate in decision-making. However, it remains unclear why some male Alabagrus initially attracted to a female either left a female's leaf or even failed to land on her leaf, rather than physically contact her.…”
Section: Condition Indexmentioning
confidence: 97%