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Lysiphlebus

Genus of wasps From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lysiphlebus
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Lysiphlebus is a genus of parasitoid wasps belonging to the family Braconidae.[1]

Quick facts Scientific classification ...

The genus has a near cosmopolitan distribution.[1]

Species:[1]

  • Lysiphlebus alpinus Stary, 1971
  • Lysiphlebus balcanicus Stary, 1998
  • Lysiphlebus cardui Marshall, 1896
  • Lysiphlebus confusus Tremblay & Eady, 1978
  • Lysiphlebus fabarum Marshall, 1896
  • Lysiphlebus testaceipes Cresson, 1880
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Reproduction

Most Lysiphlebus species are haplodiploid, like other Hymenoptera.[2] However, all-female lineages are common in some Lysiphlebus-taxa including L. fabarum, L. cardui and L. confusus.[3]

In these asexual lineages, females can reproduce by a parthenogenetic mechanism, i.e. thelytoky, that involves automixis with central fusion.[4]

The genetic system underlying sex determination in Lysiphlebus is "complementary sex determination", similar to the cape honey bee (see Haplodiploidy § Sex determination in honey bees).[5] Unlike honey bees, however, the Lysiphlebus complementary sex determiner gene is thought to be present in multiple copies.[6]

Asexual females may occasionally produce diploid males, which when mated with sexual females, can convert sexual into asexual lineages, a process which has been dubbed "contagious parthenogenesis".[7]

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Ecology

Like other Aphidiinae, Lysiphlebus are endoparasitoids of aphids. They lay their eggs inside the body of aphids, where their larvae develop, eventually spinning a mummy-like cocoon inside its remains.[8]

Most Lysiphlebus species specialize in attacking ant-defended aphid colonies.[8] They avoid attack by the ants through chemical mimicry of the aphid cuticular hydrocarbons.[9]

References

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