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Field and laboratory evidence for acclimation without costs in an egg parasitoid |
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Author: Thomson, L. J.; Robinson, M.; Hoffmann, A. A.
Year: 2001
Title: Field and laboratory evidence for acclimation
without costs in an egg parasitoid
Journal: Functional Ecology
Volume: 15
Pages: 217-221
Date: Apr
Abstract: 1. Acclimation responses are normally
assumed to increase the fitness of an organism, but supporting evidence is
generally lacking, especially under field conditions. Even where an advantage
arises from acclimation, this can be offset by other fitness costs. Heat
hardening is a well-known form of acclimation in many invertebrates where
exposure to high but sub-lethal temperatures protects against subsequent
heat-induced death. 2, Previous laboratory work has shown that hardening occurs
in wasp egg parasitoids of the genus Trichogramma
because pretreatment with a mild temperature shock can increase survival at
high temperatures. This system allowed fitness benefits and costs of hardening
under the more stringent conditions in nature to be tested. 3, Heat hardening
in Trichogramma carverae was
considered at the pupal and adult stages and it was shown that hardening had a
beneficial effect on heat resistance in the laboratory. Moreover, hardening
enhanced adult fitness in the field under hot conditions. No costs of
acclimation were detected under mild field and laboratory conditions.
Conditions leading to hardening without costs were different from another Trichogramma species. 4, Hardening can
therefore have fitness benefits without costs under held and laboratory
conditions, and this process can be used to enhance parasitism rates in
inundative commercial releases of Trichogramma
against moth pests.
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