Does the temperature–size rule apply to idiobiont parasitoids?

Author:

Gagnon Annie‐Ève1ORCID,Martel Véronique2ORCID,Boivin Guy13

Affiliation:

1. Saint‐Jean‐sur‐Richelieu Research and Development Centre Agriculture and Agri‐Food Canada 430 Boulevard Gouin, St‐Jean‐sur‐Richelieu QC Canada

2. Natural Resources Canada Canadian Forest Service 1055 du PEPS, Quebec City QC Canada

3. Department of Natural Resource Sciences (Entomology) Macdonald Campus of McGill University 21111 Lakeshore Road, Ste‐Anne‐de‐Bellevue QC Canada

Abstract

AbstractIn most ectotherms, several life‐history traits, including body size, respond to environmental conditions through the temperature–size rule (TSR). The mechanisms underlying the TSR are still being debated, but studying idiobiont insect parasitoids, which develop with a fixed amount of resources, may shed light on this relationship. In this study, we conducted experiments to determine how the developmental temperature affects various characteristics of male and female Trichogramma euproctidis (Girault) (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae), an idiobiont egg parasitoid of Lepidoptera. The study tested various hypotheses, including the cellular or oxygen diffusion hypotheses and the resource acquisition hypothesis, to understand whether T. euproctidis follows the TSR. The developmental time of both male and female T. euproctidis decreased with increasing temperature. Both males and females displayed a unimodal distribution for size, dry mass, and lipid content, with individuals at lower and higher temperatures being smaller, weighing less, and containing fewer lipids. Female lifetime fecundity increased from 13 to 24 °C and then decreased at 31 °C. Additionally, the number and size of gametes in male and female T. euproctidis displayed a unimodal distribution with increasing temperature. Trichogramma euproctidis deviates from the TSR as it follows a non‐linear reaction norm with an optimal developmental temperature. This result supports the hypothesis that for species following TSR and having unlimited access to food resources, the resource acquisition hypothesis is a significant mechanism explaining the TSR. With climate change affecting temperature, understanding the TSR is crucial, and research on insect parasitoids may help reveal how the interplay between environmental temperature and resource allocation affects the TSR in natural populations.

Funder

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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