Variable effects of dipteran parasitoids and management treatment on grasshopper fecundity in a tallgrass prairie

TitleVariable effects of dipteran parasitoids and management treatment on grasshopper fecundity in a tallgrass prairie
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsLaws, A, Joern, A
JournalBulletin of Entomological Research
Volume102
Pagination123 -130
Accession NumberKNZ001451
Keywordsgrassland, Grazing, host-parasitoid interactions, Konza Prairie Biological Station, Orthoptera, reproduction
Abstract

Grasshoppers host a number of parasitoids, but little is known about their impact on grasshopper life history attributes or how those impacts may vary with land use. Here, we report on a three-year survey of nine grasshopper species in a tallgrass prairie managed with fire and bison grazing treatments. We measured parasitoid prevalence and the impact of parasitoid infection on grasshopper fecundity to determine if grasshopper-parasitoid interactions varied with management treatment. Adult female grasshoppers were collected every three weeks from eight watersheds managed with different prescribed burning and grazing treatments. Grasshopper fecundity with and without parasitoids was estimated through dissections of reproductive tracts. Dipteran parasitoids from two families (Nemestrinidae and Tachinidae) were observed infecting grasshoppers. We found significant effects of grazing treatment, but not burn interval, on grasshopper-parasitoid interactions. Parasitoids were three times more abundant in watersheds with bison grazing than in ungrazed watersheds, and the relative abundance of nemestrinid and tachinid flies varied with grazing treatment. Parasitoid prevalence varied among grasshopper species from <0.01% infected (Mermiria bivittata) to 17% infected (Hypochlora alba). Parasitoid infection reduced individual grasshopper fecundity, with stronger effects on current reproduction than on past reproduction. Furthermore, current fecundity in parasitized grasshoppers was lower in grazed watersheds compared to ungrazed watersheds. Nemestrinid parasitoids generally had stronger impacts on grasshopper fecundity than tachinid parasitoids, the effects of which were more variable.

URLhttps://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/bulletin-of-entomological-research/article/variable-effects-of-dipteran-parasitoids-and-management-treatment-on-grasshopper-fecundity-in-a-tallgrass-prairie/EB1AD93DB7D975E1009489797D88DF2E
DOI10.1017/S0007485311000472
Short TitleVariable effects of dipteran parasitoids on grasshopper fecundity in a tallgrass prairie