Copidosoma floridanum
Copidosoma floridanum is a species of wasp in the family Encyrtidae which is primarily a parasitoid of moths in the subfamily Plusiinae. It has the largest recorded brood of any parasitoidal insect, at 3,055 individuals. The life cycle begins when a female oviposits into the eggs of a suitable host species, laying one or two eggs per host. Each egg divides repeatedly and develops into a brood of multiple individuals, a phenomenon called polyembryony. The larvae grow inside their host, breaking free at the end of the host's own larval stage.
A cosmopolitan species, Copidosoma floridanum is distributed worldwide. Because of its significance to agriculture as pest control and its phylogenic relationship with other important species, the wasp's genome is being sequenced by the Human Genome Sequencing Center as part of the i5K project, which aims to sequence the genomes of 5,000 arthropods.
Behavior
Reproductive altruism
As a putatively eusocial species, C.floridanum embodies only two of the four behavioral characteristics that characterize genuine eusociality: larvae live in groups, and there is reproductive division of labor, or reproductive altruism. The second characteristic, reproductive altruism, is, in these wasps, manifested as a sterile soldier caste that has the sole purpose of protecting their reproductive clonal siblings throughout their larval stage. Reproductive altruism behavior plays a major role in the survival and reproductive success of C.floridanum. This species displays haplodiploid sex determination, which increases relatedness among females from 0.5 to 0.75 because males develop from unfertilized eggs and are therefore haploid while females develop from normally fertilized eggs and are therefore diploid. So, as a result of eusocial progeny allocation and a distinctive type of clonal development in parasitized hosts, polyembryonic wasps including C.floridanum are able to thrive. Additionally, these wasps modify their caste ratios in response to interspecific competition, creating a trade-off between reproduction and defense, as the wasps adapt to the levels of competition within the group.Aggression and spite
C.floridanum produce eggs that divide clonally to produce larger broods. The polyembryonic wasp caste system consists of two separate groups: some of the embryos in a clone mature into reproductive larvae that ultimately develop into adults, while the other group consists of sterile soldier larvae that protect siblings from competitors. At this ecological level, the soldiers' reproductive altruism is tied to clone-level allocation to defense; thus, in order to maximize the reproductive success of the siblings, soldiers risk their own chances of reproductive success. In his study, Giron argues that soldier aggression in this wasp species is inversely related to competitors' genetic relatedness, without respect to levels of resource competition. In a later study, Giron sought to differentiate between the aggression of female and male soldiers, finding that the latter group is non-aggressive toward all competitors.Polyembryonic wasps, including C.floridanum, exhibit spite through instances of precocious larval development. Spite provides an explanation for how natural selection can favor harmful behaviors that are costly to both the actor and the recipient; spite is typically considered a form of altruism that benefits a secondary recipient. Two criteria demonstrate that spite is truly occurring: the behavior is truly costly to the actor and does not provide a long-term direct benefit; and harming behaviors are directed toward relatively unrelated individuals.
In C.floridanum, the process takes place in the following manner: the wasp lays two eggs in the egg of a moth. The wasp eggs proceed to divide asexually to produce a brood of clonal brothers and clonal sisters. The wasp larvae then mature within the moth caterpillar, utilizing the moth as food throughout growth. Competition for resources limits how many adult wasps can emerge from the host; this indicates that negative relatedness likely exists within the brood. A portion of the larvae do not emerge, who serve as adults who forgo future reproduction in order to kill relatively unrelated opposite-sex siblings maturing in the same host before dying themselves; this special group of adult killers developed precociously. Asymmetrical dispersal and asymmetrical relatedness most likely serve as the evolutionary resolution of this conflict, in favor of the sisters. This process, most importantly, frees up resources for closer relatives.