Whiteflies and white lies: Dan Gerling's speculation on deceptive communication in parasitoid-host interactions

Main Authors: Roitberg, Bernard D., Tyerman, Jabus
Format: Article eJournal
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: , 2018
Subjects:
Online Access: https://zenodo.org/record/1418744
Daftar Isi:
  • We used game theory to assess speculation from the late Dan Gerling that white­fly hosts might evolve to exploit the chemosensory system of their parasitoid natural enemies via fake (pseudo) marking pheromones. We considered three sce­narios. Scenario 1 assumed parasitoid response to hosts was non-evolvable and hard­wired. Here, we found that pseudo-marking was a viable strategy; values at fixation depended upon costs and benefits of marking. Scenario 2 as­sumed pa­rasitoid host acceptance was non-evolvable and plastic. Here, we found that strong fake marking was common when parasitism was moderate, that is when the risk was high but parasitoids would tend to reject because good hosts were avai­lable. Scenario 3 assumed plastic parasitoids that could co-evolve with the host. Here, we found parasitoid sensitivity to host marks, at the population level, never stabilized. By contrast, fake host marking did stabilize but only at high sig­nal strength when levels of parasitism were intermediate (i.e. 30–40 %); when pa­rasitism was more common, marks were ignored and hiding from enemies be­came more effective. We discuss the potential for evolution of pseudo-ovi­po­sition marks in the general sense with reference to sensory deception in non pa­rasitoid-host systems.