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      Patrones comportamentales de fóridos (Diptera: Phoridae) parasitoides de Atta colombica (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Translated title: Behavioral patterns of parasitoid phorids (Diptera: Phoridae) of Atta colombica (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

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          Abstract

          ResumenEl éxito de las interacciones parasitoide-hospedero está determinado por la conducta de búsqueda, reconocimiento, ataque y defensa que despliegan los participantes en dicha interacción. Para comprender los patrones comportamentales entre los fóridos parasitoides y su hospedero, Atta colombica, se realizaron observaciones en un fragmento de bosque en el departamento de Córdoba, con un esfuerzo muestral de 186 horas en tres nidos de esta. Se recolectaron fóridos, hormigas atacadas y la carga que llevaban. En total se capturaron 52 individuos de Eibesfeldtphora attae y 54 de Apocephalus colombicus. Se observaron diferencias en cuanto a la forma de ataque y el microhábitat preferido por los parasitoides. No hubo preferencia aparente por el tamaño de las hormigas que atacaron los fóridos, pero seleccionaron cargas de mayor tamaño para posarse sobre ellas. Cuando las hormigas respondieron al ataque, emplearon defensas individuales (adoptando posiciones o aumentando su velocidad) o grupales (cuando hormigas vecinas atacaban al parasitoide). Los fóridos parasitoides especializan su conducta con el fin de garantizar un ataque exitoso sobre su hospedero, quien responde modificando su comportamiento según el parasitoide atacante.

          Translated abstract

          AbstractIn ecology, the success of parasitoid-host interactions is determined by the behavior of seeking, recognition, attack and defense deployed by the participants in the interaction. Our study aimed to understand the behavioral patterns between parasitoid phorids and their host Atta colombica from a forest fragment of Córdoba department, Colombia. We observed three nests of Atta colombica, from December 2013 to Januray 2015 (including dry and rainy seasons), for a total effort of 189 hours. We observed Phorids, their attacks to ants and collected their loads; we also considered differences in the way the parasitoids attacked and observed the microhabitat they preferred. A total of 52 individuals of Eibesfeldtphora attae and 54 of Apocephalus colombicus were collected. Apparently there was no preference for the size of the ants that were attacked by phorids, but larger loads were selected to land on them. When the ants responded to the phorid attack, they used individual defenses (adopting positions or increasing their speed) or grupal defenses (closer ants attacking the phorid). Parasitoid phorids have specialized their behavior, in order to ensure a successful attack on their host, who responded by modifying its behavior, according to the attacker (parasitoid).

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          Most cited references26

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          Defense against parasites by hitchhikers in leaf-cutting ants: a quantitative assessment

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            Fitness, parasitoids, and biological control: an opinion

            Fitness, defined as the per capita rate of increase of a genotype with reference to the population carrying the associated genes, is a concept used by biologists to describe how well an individual performs in a population. Fitness is rarely measured directly and biologists resort to proxies more easily measured but with varying connection to fitness. Size, progeny survival, and developmental rate are the most common proxies used in the literature to describe parasitoid fitness. The importance of the proxies varies between papers looking at evolutionary theories and those assessing ecological applications. The most direct measures of fitness for parasitoids are realised fecundity for females and mating ability for males, although these proxies are more difficult to measure under natural conditions. For practical purposes, measure of size, through body size or mass, is the proxy easiest to use while providing good comparative values; however, care must be taken when using a single proxy, as proxies can be affected differently by rearing conditions of the parasitoid. Résumé La valeur adaptative, définie comme le taux d’accroissement per capita d’un génotype en référence à une population possédant les gènes associés, est un concept utilisé par les biologistes pour décrire la performance d’un individu dans une population. Cependant la valeur adaptative est rarement mesurée directement et les biologistes utilisent plutôt des indices, plus faciles à mesurer mais qui sont de valeur inégale. La taille, la survie de la progéniture et le taux de développement sont les indices les plus souvent utilisés dans la littérature scientifique pour décrire la valeur adaptative des parasitoïdes. Toutefois, l’importance des indices varie selon que les articles traitent d’écologie évolutive ou d’écologie appliquée. Les indices les plus directement reliés à la valeur adaptative des parasitoïdes sont la fécondité réalisée pour les femelles et la capacité d’accouplement pour les mâles. Cependant, ces indices sont difficiles à mesurer dans des conditions réalistes. D’un point de vue pratique la taille, mesurée par le biais des dimensions ou de la masse du corps, est l’indice donnant une bonne valeur comparative le plus facile à utiliser. Toutefois, la prudence s’impose lorsqu’un seul indice est utilisé. En effet, les indices peuvent être influencés différemment par les conditions d’élevage d’un parasitoïde.
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              The evolutionary ecology of resistance to parasitoids by Drosophila

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                rbt
                Revista de Biología Tropical
                Rev. biol. trop
                Universidad de Costa Rica (San José, San José, Costa Rica )
                0034-7744
                0034-7744
                June 2017
                : 65
                : 2
                : 461-473
                Affiliations
                [1] Montería Córdoba orgnameUniversidad de Córdoba orgdiv1Facultad de Ciencias Básicas orgdiv2Departamento de Biología Colombia robindavidbc28@ 123456gmail.com
                [2] Montería Córdoba orgnameUniversidad de Córdoba orgdiv1Facultad de Ciencias Básicas orgdiv2Departamento de Biología Colombia amortega25@ 123456yahoo.com.mx
                [3] Medellín Antioquía orgnameUniversidad Nacional de Colombia orgdiv1Facultad de Ciencias orgdiv2Grupo de Sustancias Activas y Biotecnología Colombia adortizr@ 123456unal.edu.co
                Article
                S0034-77442017000200461
                10.15517/rbt.v65i2.24746
                911fdb1e-cabf-4107-9bb0-17454d5f68c1

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 International License.

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                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 27, Pages: 13
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                SciELO Costa Rica


                hormigas cortadoras de hojas,comportamiento-hospedero,comportamiento de selección,interacciones,parasitoidismo,leaf-cutting ants,host behavior,host selection,interactions,parasitism

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