Body sizes of hosts and parasitoids in individual feeding relationships
- 12 January 2005
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 102 (3), 684-689
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0408780102
Abstract
In a natural community of 49 species (12 species of aphids and 37 species of their parasitoids), body lengths of 2,151 parasitoid individuals were, to an excellent approximation, related to the body lengths of their individual aphid hosts by a power law with an exponent close to 3/4. Two alternative models predict this exponent. One is based on surface area to volume relationships. The other is based on recent developments in metabolic ecology. Both models require a changing ratio (in both host and parasitoid) of length to diameter with increasing body length. These changing ratios are manifested differently in the two models and result in testably different predictions for the scaling of body form with increasing size. The estimated exponent of 3/4 for the relationship between individual host body size and individual parasitoid body size degrades to an exponent of nearly 1/2, and the scatter in the relationship between aphid and parasitoid body length is substantially increased, if the average length of a parasitoid species is examined as a function of the average length of its aphid host species instead of using measurements of individuals.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- BODY SIZE DISTRIBUTION IN PREDATORY LADYBIRD BEETLES REFLECTS THAT OF THEIR PREYEcology, 2001
- Re-examination of the “3/4-law” of MetabolismJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2001
- Predators, parasitoids and pathogens: species richness, trophic generality and body sizes in a natural food webJournal of Animal Ecology, 2000
- Body mass allometries caused by physiological or ecological constraints?Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1998
- Dynamical Effects of Host Size- and Parasitoid State-Dependent Attacks by ParasitoidsJournal of Animal Ecology, 1997
- The Effect of Egg Limitation on Stability in Insect Host-Parasitoid Population ModelsJournal of Animal Ecology, 1996
- Flexible Larval Growth Allows Use of a Range of Host Sizes by a Parasitoid WaspEcology, 1994
- Size-Selective Sex-Allocation and Host Feeding in a Parasitoid--Host ModelJournal of Animal Ecology, 1992
- A Comparative Examination of Life-Span and Fecundity in Parasitoid HymenopteraJournal of Animal Ecology, 1991
- Evidence for a `Fast-Slow' Continuum of Life-History Traits Among Parasitoid HymenopteraFunctional Ecology, 1991