“…Competition is high not only because a male-biased sex-ratio, but also from the relatively narrow daily temporal window in which males and females are active (early morning and late afternoon), a pattern typical of mutillid wasps irrespective of the temperatures at the reproductive sites (from the hot summers of Michigan, Minnesota and southern Spain sand dune systems to the cool spring of central Italy) (Chapman et al, 1926;Evans, 1982;Polidori et al, 2009aPolidori et al, , 2010aPolidori et al, , 2012. In addition to an inverse relationship with temperature previously reported for N. viduata female activity (Polidori et al, 2010a) (and, thus, likely occurring also for males, given the very similar daily distribution), the activity of the host species was also negatively associated with that of the parasitoid (Polidori et al, 2010a).…”