Host plant species identity is known to influence herbivores’ likelihood of mortality from parasitoids. Possible mechanisms responsible for host plant effects on herbivore-parasitoid interactions include differences between plant species in the emission of volatile organic compounds that attract parasitoids to herbivore infested plants, differences between plant species in the apparency of herbivores, differences between plant species in the ability of herbivores to resist parasitoid attack, and differences in herbivore densities across plant species. The purpose of this study is to separate the effects of trait-mediated and density-mediated interactions by testing whether host plant species identities explain variation in the outcome of caterpillar-parasitoid interactions while accounting for variation in caterpillar densities. We used an observational experiment to do this, collecting caterpillars from eight tree species in forests of central Connecticut for three weeks each June from 2004 to 2007. Caterpillar collection was performed with a quantitative sampling protocol by sampling whole tree branches, counting the number of leaves on the branches, and measuring leaf areas for each host plant species, allowing calculations of caterpillar densities. Caterpillars were reared in lab on foliage from the same host plant species on which they were collected, and instances of parasitism by wasps and flies were recorded.
Results/Conclusions