| Summary of Reviewers' Comments   THIS STUDY OF A
  GROUP OF HYMENOPTERA THAT DEMONSTRATES GREAT DIVERSITY IN BEHAVIOUR HAS
  MERIT, BUT OMITS CRITICAL DETAILS IN "Materials & Methods" OF CULTURE
  AQUISITION AND EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE THAT WOULD ALLOW FOR A CRITIQUE OF
  PREVIOUS PUBLISHED REPORTS.  AS  EXPERIMENTAL ENVIRONMENT AND HOST SIZE
  ESPECIALLY INFLUENCE SUPERPARASITIZATION IT IS ESSENTIAL TO CLEARLY  EXPLAIN THEM.  THERE IS A CRITIQUE OF ONE AUTHOR'S WORK BUT AN OMISSION OF
  SEVERAL OTHERS THAT PRESENT CONFLICTING RESULTS. | 
 
|   GENETICS OF SOLITARY AND GREGARIOUS EMERGENCE IN THE PARASITOID WASP MUSCIDIFURAX
  RAPTORELLUS: PATERNAL MODIFICATION OF
  LARVAL AGGRESSION.   Richard Stouthamer1, and E. Fred Legner2   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1Department of Entomology, Wageningen Agricultural University P.O. Box
  8031, 6700EH Wageningen, The Netherlands   2 Department of Entomology,
  University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA (e.legner@ucr.edu)   Summary          Studies with new field isolates of a Peruvian strain in 1995 by
  Richard Stouthamer et al. (unpublished) have shown a greater involvement of larval
  cannibalism and much complexity in these species' reproduction.  Indeed survival mechanisms in parasitoids
  include many behaviors; among which increased cannibalism by more aggressive
  larvae may be triggered during times of host scarcity.  The pteromalid
  parasitoid Muscidifurax raptorellus Kogan & Legner
  is polymorphic for its oviposition behavior, fly pupae parasitized by the
  solitary form always give rise to one offspring, while fly pupae parasitized
  by the gregarious form give rise to more than one offspring in approximately
  60% of the hosts. Legner has studied the inheritance of gregarious emergence,
  i.e. more than one wasp emerges per host, in great detail.  He found this trait to be polygenically
  controlled by 2‑19 genes. 
  Females carrying a higher percentage of their genome from the
  gregarious form have a higher percentage of their offspring emerging
  gregariously from a host.  More
  surprisingly he also found that the father's genetic background influenced
  the rate at which his progeny emerged gregariously.  Males from a gregarious line, when mated with females from a
  solitary line, caused the females to start having offspring more
  gregariously.  The opposite effect takes
  place when males from the solitary line are used.  Legner's hypothesis was that the males transferred some
  behavior modifying substance with their sperm to the female, which resulted
  in a higher or lower level of gregarious oviposition.  Here an alternative hypothesis is tested
  in which the level of gregarious emergence from hosts is determined by not
  only the number of eggs a female oviposits in a host, but also by the level
  of larval aggression.  The father's
  influence on the level of gregarious emergence in this hypothesis only takes
  place through his contribution to the genetic makeup of the larvae, with the
  larvae with a larger fraction of their genome from the solitary line showing
  higher levels of larval aggression.  ADD:  Under our experimental conditions the identity of the male did not
  influence the level of gregarious oviposition by a female, but it did have a
  significant influence on the number of larvae that survived.  The maternal behavior modification
  hypothesis did not apply significantly in this case where the cultures
  originated from new field acquisitions, the duration of the experiment was
  shorter and the parasitization environment was different than in the earlier
  investigations.   Keywords: oviposition behavior, larval aggression, clutch size ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Introduction  Species of the pteromalid genus Muscidifurax are parasitoids of
  synanthropic flies.  The genus is
  indigenous to the Americas where it shows great diversity (Kogan & Legner
  1970).   Typically most species
  superparasitize with 2-3 eggs but only one wasp emerges per host.  However, in a South American species Muscidifurax raptorellus Kogan & Legner,
  two populations are known that differ in the number of wasps emerging per
  housefly pupa (Legner 1987a,b).  The
  form originating from Chile produces offspring gregariously, i.e. from
  approximately 60% of the hosts more than one wasp emerges while up to 17
  wasps have been known to emerge from a single housefly pupa (Legner
  1987b).  However, the form originating
  from Peru rarely produces more than one offspring per host.  The genetics of level of gregarious
  oviposition has been studied in detail by Legner (1987, 1988a,b; 1989a,b,c;
  1991a,b; 1993).  The level of
  gregarious emergence of the offspring of a virgin female was found to be
  determined by the proportion of the genome originating from the gregarious
  form (Legner 1987b).  The higher this
  proportion the higher the level of gregariousness.  This trait appears to be polygenically determined and 2‑19
  genes are involved in coding for this character (Legner 1991a).  More surprisingly, the level of
  gregariousness in offspring emergence was not only a function of the mother’s
  genetic makeup but the father's genetic background also influenced the level
  of gregariousness in which his offspring emerged.  Considerable amounts of data indicated that the male actually
  influences the females oviposition behavior in such a way that if the male
  originates from a gregarious line his mate lays her eggs more gregariously,
  and female lays fewer eggs per host when she mates with males originating
  from the solitary line (Legner 1987b, 1988b, 1993).  High levels of variation in these experiments suggested that
  other mechanisms might interplay in the paternal influencing of maternal
  behavior.  A number of possible
  behavior modifying substances, that could be transferred from the male to the
  female through the seminal fluid, have been suggested (Legner 1987b), these include
  hormones and bacteria.  Because males
  of the solitary line reduce the gregariousness of the offspring, and males of
  the gregarious line increase it one would have to assume the presence of two
  different substances: one that increases the level of gregarious oviposition
  and another that decreases this level.   Another hypothesis to explain level of
  gregarious emergence suggests that it is determined by two factors: a) the
  number of eggs a female lays per host and b) the level of aggressive
  interactions between the larvae emerging from the eggs.  The influence of the father in this
  hypothesis is primarily through his genetic contribution to his offspring
  (factor b), while under Legner's (1987b) original hypothesis the number of
  eggs a female lays is influenced by factor a.  These hypotheses were discriminated by mating females to males either
  of the gregarious form or of the solitary form and by determining  in half of the hosts the number of eggs
  that were oviposited and in the other half the number of wasps that
  emerged.  The mothers in these tests were  F1 hybrid females between the gregarious
  and solitary line.  These females were
  chosen because they are known to show both kinds of responses; i.e. when
  mated to a male of the gregarious line the females produce more offspring per
  host than when allowed to oviposit as virgins (Legner 1987b), and when such hybrid
  females are mated to solitary males they produce fewer offspring per host
  than virgin females.   Materials and
  Methods  Culture origin:  New field collections of Muscidifurax raptorellus from Peru
  and Chile were obtained in 1995.  FROM WHAT SPECIFIC AREA AND
  TIME OF YEAR IN EACH COUNTRY WERE THE CULTURES OBTAINED? A
  Peruvian/Chilean hybrid and a Chilean strain used in these experiments were
  maintained on pupae of the housefly (Musca domestica
  L.).  The hybrid was formed by mating
  large numbers of virgin Chilean females to Peruvian males followed by
  propagation of the culture for 6 generations, after which the hybrid
  continued to reproduce solitarily in mass culture.  ADD
  REFERENCE TO Kogan & Legner (1970).   Experimental setup: All experiments were done at 25EC and 24 hrs light.  Hybrid females between the solitary and
  gregarious lines were secured by mating solitary females with gregarious
  males.  Daughters of this cross were
  used in the experiment, where they were randomly assigned to one of three
  treatment groups.  The treatment
  groups consisted of mating the females to males of either (a) gregarious or
  (b) solitary strain or (c) leaving them unmated.  To each group respectively 16, 13 and 21 females were
  assigned.  After 24hrs the males were
  removed and each female was given 20 hosts daily for oviposition  The hosts of each day were randomly
  assigned to two groups of each 10 hosts. 
  The hosts of the first group were opened within 48 hrs after parasitization
  had taken place to determine the number of eggs laid per host.  The hosts of the second group were
  individually placed in a gelatin capsule (size 000) for wasp emergence.  In total the parasitization of these wasps
  was followed for 5 days, thus per mother 50 hosts were opened to determine
  the number of eggs laid per host and 50 hosts were kept for emergence.  WHAT ARE THE DIMENSIONS (or volume) OF THE HOUSEFLY
  PUPARIA?  -- WHAT IS THE PARASITIZATION
  ENVIRONMENT? (e.g., In screened polystyrene vials (46 cm3),
  with a basal are of 7 cm2, as in earlier experiments)   The experiment was done in such a way that the
  mother's group identity, i.e. whether she was mated to a solitary male or a
  gregarious male, was not known to the person who did the egg and wasp
  counts.  This avoided prior knowledge
  from influencing the results.   Analysis of variance was performed on the data
  derived from the two samples of fifty hosts that were either opened for egg
  counts or were left for wasp emergence for each mother: the percentage of the
  hosts that had been opened containing more than one egg, the percentage of
  hosts from which more than one wasp emerged, the difference between these two
  percentages, the total number of eggs in the egg sample, the total number of
  wasps in the wasp sample and the difference between the total number of eggs
  and the total number of wasps, the total number of parasitized hosts, i.e.
  those containing one or more eggs, the total number of parasitized hosts
  resulting in adult offspring and the difference between these two
  measurements per female.  No
  transformation was done for the statistical analysis of the data.  To determine the significance of the
  differences between means a Duncan's Multiple range test was used with alpha
  =0.05.   CONSIDERATION
  OF THE FOLLOWING SHOULD BE ADDED:             Superparasitism (= insertion of more than one
  parasitoid egg per host) occurs in both the Peruvian and Chilean strain, and
  subsequent cannibalism by hatched larvae always follows.  The Peruvian strain deposits a lower
  number of eggs per host than the Chilean strain but cannibalism intensity is
  higher.  Therefore, it is difficult to
  determine the exact number of eggs initially deposited by both species.  The number of adult parasitoids that
  survive is always less in the Peruvian strain and usually averages about
  one.  On the contrary, more adult
  survivors usually occur in the Chilean strain, averaging about seven at a
  host density of 20 per 24 hrs.  A
  standardization of host density, size, age and duration of exposure to
  parasitization is essential in experiments as they influence the number of
  eggs deposited and the rate of cannibalism.     Results  The results shown in table 1 indicate that the
  percentage of hosts in which more than one egg was found did not differ
  significantly between females mated with a male from the gregarious line or
  the solitary line.  There was a
  significant difference however between females mated to solitary males versus
  virgin females in the proportion of the eggs that were placed gregariously on
  a host.  The percentage of wasps that
  emerged gregariously did however differ significantly between all groups with
  that percentage being the highest for the offspring of the gregarious male,
  intermediate for the offspring of the virgin females and the lowest for the
  offspring of the solitary males. The difference between the percentages of
  hosts with gregarious eggs vs gregarious wasps also differed between the
  three groups.  The group mated to the
  gregarious males showed the smallest difference, the virgin females were
  intermediate while the offspring of the solitary males showed the largest
  reduction in the percentage gregariousness.   There were no significant differences between
  the groups in the total number of eggs per 5 day sample (table 2), however the number of
  wasps that emerged from the five day sample did differ significantly: the
  gregarious group had a significantly higher number of adult progeny than the
  solitary or virgin group. These two groups however did not differ from each
  other in this characteristic.  The
  difference between the number of eggs per five-day sample and the number of
  wasps per sample differed among all groups with the gregarious group showing
  the smallest reduction in numbers and the solitary the highest.   Finally there appeared to be no difference in
  the number of hosts that contained eggs between the groups nor in the number
  of hosts giving rise to wasps or in the difference between the numbers of
  hosts containing eggs versus those giving rise to wasps (table 3).   Discussion  Indeed survival mechanisms in parasitoids
  include many behaviors; among which increased cannibalism by more aggressive
  larvae may be triggered during times of host scarcity.  In the current
  experiments the number of eggs laid per host by a hybrid the type of male to
  which she was mated did not appreciably influence female.  However, the genetic background of the
  male did influence the percentage of hosts from which more than one wasp
  emerged.  Consequently, the hypothesis
  that the male influences the female’s egg laying behavior has to be rather in
  favor of the hypothesis that larvae with a large proportion of their genome
  stemming from the solitary line somehow reduce the number that will
  eventually emerge from a host.  The
  number of eggs laid per mother did not differ between the groups, and neither
  did the number of hosts that has been parasitized.  Therefore, the reduction in the number of hosts from which
  wasps emerge gregariously was caused by a reduction during the larval
  stage.  Clearly, the offspring of the
  solitary males had the highest mortally, followed by that of the virgin
  females and the least mortality took place in the offspring of the gregarious
  males.  Several authors have reported
  that aggressive interactions take place between the larvae of the species M. raptor Girault & Sanders.  Wylie (1971) found that larvae of M. raptor
  will spend approximately the first ten hours after hatching moving about on
  the host while occasionally feeding on the pupa.  If a host has several eggs on it, the larva that hatches first
  attacks and kills most or all of the eggs. 
  If two larvae happen to survive the first instar, combat will take
  place in the second instar.  Podoler
  and Mendel (1977) report similar observations for M. raptor.  Legner (1987b) also reports that <2% of
  the hosts parasitized by the solitary form of M. raptorellus
  receive more than one egg, but rarely more than one wasp emerges.  This could also indicate that larval
  aggression occurs in this species and indeed aggression was observed between
  the larvae of the solitary form of this species.  Apparently the larval combat generally leads to only one wasp
  emerging per host, (table 3).   The level of aggressiveness between the larvae
  can be influenced to a maximal extent when males of the different lines are
  crossed with hybrid females between these lines.  The fertilized eggs result in female larvae that have on
  average either 75% of their genome from the solitary line ((S & X G
  %)& X S %)& or 25% of the solitary line ((S& X G%)& X
  G%)&.  In the first case the
  larvae apparently engage in combat which results in a reduction in the
  percentage of hosts that give rise to more than one offspring (fig. 1c).  While in the second case the larvae show
  less aggressive interactions, and per host, more of the eggs survive to give
  rise to adult wasps (fig. 1a).  The
  offspring of the virgin females is intermediate because all of their
  offspring will have on average 50% of their genome stemming from the solitary
  line (fig 1c.).  There could also be
  an influence of the father on the survival of male and female larvae in these
  crosses.  In the case of solitary
  fathers the fertilized eggs, i.e. daughters have on average 75% of the genome
  of the solitary line and can be expected to fight more than their male
  siblings, which have 50% of their genome from the solitary line.  In the case of offspring of the gregarious
  males, their daughters have only 25% of their genome coming from the solitary
  line while the males have 50% of their genome coming from the solitary line.  Consequently, in those cases where one
  male and one female are placed in a host in case of the
  "gregarious" group it would be expected that the one male one
  female combination would be more prevalent than in case of the
  "solitary" group, while at the same time the one male group should
  be larger in the gregarious line than in the solitary line. Although indeed
  these trends are visible in the data (table
  4) they are rather subtle, probably
  mainly because the fraction of the hosts receiving one male and female egg is
  limited in these crosses.   The gregarious emergence is the result of two,
  possibly linked, effects: the number of eggs a female oviposits per host,
  this effect is determined purely by the female’s genome and secondly the
  level of aggressive interactions between the larvae, this level is influenced
  by the genetic background of both parents. 
  Females of the solitary line lay fewer eggs per host than the females
  of the gregarious line.  It is
  suspected that larvae of the gregarious line show little aggressive behavior
  towards each other, while the larvae of the solitary line are aggressive. The
  gregarious strain also superasitizes: 
  that is, more eggs are laid in a host than will survive to adulthood.  The cause of the mortality in the ones
  that do not survive could be due to genetic inferiority or to some degree of
  aggressiveness. These two groups of genes could interact in such a way that
  they would enhance each other.  The
  higher the percentage of the genome stemming from the gregarious line the
  higher the number of hosts with more than one egg and the lower the level of
  larval aggression, in contrast the lower the percentage of the gregarious
  genome the lower the level of gregarious oviposition and the higher the level
  of larval aggression.  Therefore, one
  would expect a slight s shaped curve to describe the relationship
  between the percentage of the genome from the gregarious line in a virgin
  mother and the percentage of the hosts giving rise to more than one
  offspring.  When this relationship
  (Legner 1987b, 1991a) is inspected indeed such a deviation, albeit slight, is
  found.  The findings of Legner (1987b,
  1991a) on the number of genes influencing the gregarious and solitary
  oviposition should be reexamined in the light of these two groups genes being
  involved.  The finding that within one
  species both solitary, fighting forms and gregarious, non‑fighting
  forms appears to be unique to M.
  raptorellus.  This will allow the testing of some of the
  theory developed by Godfray (1987) on the evolution of solitary and gregarious
  oviposition.   There is also a heterosis in the F-1 hybrids
  that is not explained in this discussion. 
  The heterosis is expressed in several ways:  higher numbers of offspring and hosts killed, etc.  Also, backcrossing data suggest that at least
  eight loci were actively segregating for gregariousness behavior.   DIFFERENCES
  FROM PREVIOUS STUDIES IN THE EXPERIMENTAL ENVIRONMENT, HOST SIZE, QUALITY AND
  DENSITY SHOULD BE NOTED HERE TO EXPLAIN LARVAL CANIBALISM RATES.   Acknowledgement  Support for P. Strippentow from a European
  Union Tempus grant is gratefully acknowledged.  Conversations with Molly Hunter and Marcel Visser greatly
  helped to clarify our thinking about this phenomenon.  Leo Koopman, André Gidding and Frans van
  Aggelen kindly supplied host for these experiments.    
  References  Godfray,
  H. C. J.  1987.  The evolution of clutch size in parasitic
  wasps.  Am. Nat. 129: 221‑233                   ADD:   Kogan, M. & E. F. Legner.  1970.  A biosystematic revision of the genus Muscidifurax (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) with descriptions
  of                               four new species.  Canad. Entomol. 102(10): 
  1268-1290.   Legner, E. F.  1987a.  Further insights into extranuclear influences on behavior
  elicited by males in the genus Muscidifurax.  Proc. 52 annual conf.       Cal. Mosquito and Vector Control
  Association: 127‑130.    Legner, E. F.  1987b.  Inheritance of
  gregarious and solitary development in Muscidifurax
  raptorellus.  Can. Ent. 119: 791‑808.    Legner, E. F.  1988a.  Hybridization in principal parasitoids of
  synanthropic diptera: The genus Muscidifurax.
  Hilgardia
  56(4): 36pp.    Legner, E. F.  1988b.  Muscidifurax raptorellus females exhibit
  postmating oviposition behavior typical of the male genome.  Ann. Entomol. Soc.      
  Am. 81: 522‑527
     Legner, E. F.  1989a.  Wary genes and
  accretive inheritance in Hymenoptera. 
  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 82: 245‑249.    Legner,
  E. F.  1989b.  Paternal influences in males of Muscidifurax raptorellus.  Entomophaga 34: 307‑320    Legner, E. F.  1989c.  Phenotypic expression of polygenes in Muscidifurax raptorellus,
  a synanthropic fly parasitoid. Entomophaga 34: 523‑530.    Legner. 
  E. F.  1991a.  Estimations of
  number of active loci, dominance and heritability in polygenic inheritance of
  gregarious behavior in       Muscidifurax raptorellus.  Entomophaga 36: 1‑18    Legner, E. F.  1991b.  Recombinant males
  in the parasitic wasp Muscidifurax
  raptorellus. Entomophaga 36: 173‑181   Legner, E. F.  1993.  Theory for quantitative inheritance of behavior in a protelean
  parasitoid, Muscidifurax raptorellus (Hymenoptera:         Pteromalidae).  Eur. J. Entomol. 90: 
  11-21.   Podoler, H. & Z. Mendel.  1977.  Analysis of solitariness in a
  parasite-host system (Muscidifurax raptor – Ceratitis capitata).  Ecol. Entomol 2: 
       
  153-160   Wylie, H. G.  1971.  Observations on intraspecific larval competition in three
  hymenopterous parasites of fly puparia. Can. Ent. 103: 137‑142     --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------   Table 1.  Mean and standard error of the percentage of hosts that
  contained more than one egg (egg/hst), from which more than one wasp emerged
  (wasp/hst), and the difference between these values for hybrid females that
  had mated either with a gregarious male, had remained virgin or had mated
  with a solitary male.                     n               >egg/hst                                     >wasps/hst                                 difference   gregarious male                         16              38.4
  (2.39)                                   28.7
  (2.13)                                   
  9.8  (2.93)   virgin                                           21              33.8 (2.08)                                   12.3 (1.86)                                   21.6  (2.56)                     solitary
  male                               13              43.1 (2.65)                                    5.3 (2.36)                                  37.8 
  (3.25)       Table 2. Mean and standard error of the total number of offspring
  (eggs or wasps) and the difference between these numbers, for hybrid females
  that had mated either with a gregarious male, had remained virgin or had
  mated with a solitary male.                        n               >egg/hst                                     >wasps/hst                                 difference   gregarious male                         16              60.6
  (2.25)                                   54.8 (1.97)                                    5.8
  (1.95)   virgin                                       22                 57.0 (1.97)                                   43.2
  (1.72)                                   13.8
  (1.71)                     solitary
  male                               13              58.8 (2.51)                                   38.7 (2.19)                                   20.1 (2.17)       Table 3.  Mean and standard error of the number of
  parasitized hosts indicated by the presence        of
  one or more eggs, by the emergence of one or more wasps and the difference
  between these numbers, for hybrid females that had mated either with a
  gregarious male, had remained virgin or had mated with a solitary male.   n               hosts
  with egg                           host
  with wasps                         difference   gregarious male                         16              41.6 (1.24)                                   40.3 (1.40)                                    1.3 (0.93)   virgin                                           21              40.9 (1.08)                                   38.9 (1.22)                                    2.1 (0.81)   solitary male                               13              39.2 (1.37)                                   37.3 (1.55)                                    1.9 (1.03)       Table 4. Total egg and wasps distribution
  per host for females that had either mated with males from a gregarious line,
  had remained virgin or had mated with males from a solitary line.  Egg allocation per host, represented as
  the percentage of all hosts in egg sample containing either 1, 2, 3 or 4
  eggs.  Wasp distribution per hosts
  represented as the percentage of hosts containing a male (M) or a female (F)
  or a combination of the two.     No.                             Sample
  dissected for egg counts              of mothers   ---------------------------------------------------------           % of hosts with
  1-4 eggs                                      No.                             1                2                3                4 hosts                    gregarious male                         16              677                             62.5           32.2           5.0             0.3                                   virgin                                          22                 855                       65.1             
  30.4           3.7             0.7   solitary male                               13              507                       56.8                 36.9           5.3             1.0       No.                             Sample
  left for wasp counts of                                ----------------------------------------------------------------- mothers                     %
  of hosts from which males and/or females emerged   No.           1M            1F             2M            2F             1M1F       1M2F       3M            3F hosts   gregarious male                         16              661            10.8           59.6            0               23.1            3.5             0.3             0                2.6                                 virgin                                           22 803            87.5           0           12.1               0                 0                0         0.4                 0   solitary male                               13              483             9.3            
  86.1           0               3.5             
  1.0              0              
  0                 0       |