Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2426366 Behavioural Processes 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Behavioral traits were assessed for larvae and adults of Eriopis connexa.•There was ontogenic consistency in behavioral traits between larvae and adults.•Behavioral trait variation was higher among pyrethorid-resistant insects.•The resistant population exhibited lower aggressiveness as larvae, but higher activity.•Reduced aggressiveness was associated with predator population increase.

The potential relevance of complete metamorphosis for the individual variation in sets of behavioral traits and their fitness consequences in predatory species led to the present study. A set of nine behavioral traits were assessed for the larvae and adults of a pyrethroid-resistant and a susceptible population of the lady beetle Eriopis connexa. The aim was to assess: 1) the average individual behavioral (pheno)types and their within-population variation, 2) their ontogenic behavioral consistency from larva to adult, and 3) whether the observed correlated sets of behavioral traits can impact fitness. The average behavioral type differed between populations. The pyrethroid-resistant population consistently exhibited lower aggressiveness (as larvae) and exploration, but showed higher activity, as well as larva sociality, and sometimes boldness than the susceptible population. Behavioral trait variation was higher among pyrethroid-resistant individuals, particularly during the larval stage, but there was significant behavior correlation between larvae and adults, regardless of the insect population. Reduced aggressiveness, and to a lesser extent intermediate levels of boldness against heterospecific individuals were associated with higher population growth. Besides shedding light on the ontogenic consistency of behavioral traits and their fitness impact, our results also suggest that reduced aggressiveness is associated with predator population increase, but may compromise its effectiveness as a biocontrol agent.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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