1996
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2311.1996.tb01179.x
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The window of vulnerability and its effect on relative parasitoid abundance

Abstract: Summary. 1. The length of time that a gall‐forming midge, Rhopalomyia califomica, was vulnerable to attack by four parasitoid species was measured in the field at two locations.2. The midge had a restricted window of vulnerability to each of the parasitoid species, but similar windows of vulnerability were found at the two sites.3. A stage‐structured model was used to illustrate that the length of the vulnerable window should have no effect on the fraction parasitized by a single parasitoid species if that sp… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…From the parasitoids' point of view, the relative abun dance of a pair of hosts is not necessarily determined by their absolute numbers: host individuals of different ages are rarely equally vulnerable to parasitoid attacks (Briggs & Latto, 1996;Benrey & Denno, 1997). The risk of para sitism for the coexisting hosts might thus also depend on the degree of synchrony in hosts' windows of vulnerabil ity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the parasitoids' point of view, the relative abun dance of a pair of hosts is not necessarily determined by their absolute numbers: host individuals of different ages are rarely equally vulnerable to parasitoid attacks (Briggs & Latto, 1996;Benrey & Denno, 1997). The risk of para sitism for the coexisting hosts might thus also depend on the degree of synchrony in hosts' windows of vulnerabil ity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Independent assessments of trophic interactions between the midge, its host plant and its natural enemies suggest that between three and four trophic levels are associated with B. pilularis galls (Doutt 1961;Force 1970Force , 1974Ehler 1982;Hopper 1984;Ehler and Kinsey 1991;Latto and Briggs 1995;Briggs and Latto 1996, 2000, 2001 (Fig. 2).…”
Section: Natural History Of Systemmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Life cycle events closely tied to host plant phenology and thus likely altered by variation in the timing of tissue availability include the timing of mating (Cushman et al 1994;Mopper 1996), oviposition (Ohgushi 1991), the rate of larval development (Kaitaniemi et al 1997;Hicks et al 2007), and the timing of eclosion (Komatsu and Akimoto 1995;Van Dongen et al 1997;Rehill and Schultz 2002). Variation in the timing of plant tissue formation can also directly affect mortality due to natural enemies through changes in enemy abundance (Yukawa and Akimoto 2006), attack timing (Briggs and Latto 1996;Van Nouhuys and Lei 2004), and community structure (Kaitaniemi and Ruohomaki 1999;Yukawa and Akimoto 2006). The response of insect herbivores to resource uncertainty can extend to include plasticity in development and/or bet-hedging strategies (Nylin and Gotthard 1998;Danks 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%