taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
038A87F6FF81FFA1FF26F99642AEFA5D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/15701467/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15701467	Fig. 1. Suitability parameters of hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites parasitised by Campoletis sonorensis. Parasitoid success is expressed as the number of hosts from which adult solitary or gregarious parasitoids are developed. Parasitoid cocoon mortality is expressed as the number of developed cocoons from which adult parasitoids did not emerge. The host success is measured as the number of hosts that developed into adult moths, whether the host was parasitised or not. Host mortality is calculated from the number of hosts that died after parasitism without developing into a moth or parasitoid. Sample size = 20; replicates = 10. Note: Means (±SE) with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parasitoid success and host mortality were analysed using analysis of variance (ANOVA), and parasitoid cocoon mortality and host success were analysed using Welch’s ANOVA.	Fig. 1. Suitability parameters of hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites parasitised by Campoletis sonorensis. Parasitoid success is expressed as the number of hosts from which adult solitary or gregarious parasitoids are developed. Parasitoid cocoon mortality is expressed as the number of developed cocoons from which adult parasitoids did not emerge. The host success is measured as the number of hosts that developed into adult moths, whether the host was parasitised or not. Host mortality is calculated from the number of hosts that died after parasitism without developing into a moth or parasitoid. Sample size = 20; replicates = 10. Note: Means (±SE) with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parasitoid success and host mortality were analysed using analysis of variance (ANOVA), and parasitoid cocoon mortality and host success were analysed using Welch’s ANOVA.	2020-10-21	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos		Zenodo	biologists	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos			
038A87F6FF81FFA1FF26F99642AEFA5D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/15701469/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15701469	Fig. 2. Development times in days for Campoletis sonorensis and Cotesia vanessae on Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites. White: days from oviposition to cocoon formation; light grey: days from cocoon to adult emergence; dark grey: days from oviposition to adult emergence. Means (±SE) with the same letter within each parasitoid species are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples for each parasitoid species and each parasitoid development stage separately.	Fig. 2. Development times in days for Campoletis sonorensis and Cotesia vanessae on Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites. White: days from oviposition to cocoon formation; light grey: days from cocoon to adult emergence; dark grey: days from oviposition to adult emergence. Means (±SE) with the same letter within each parasitoid species are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples for each parasitoid species and each parasitoid development stage separately.	2020-10-21	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos		Zenodo	biologists	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos			
038A87F6FF86FFA3FF39F9DD4775FE10.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/15701471/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15701471	Fig. 3. Suitability parameters of hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites parasitised by Cotesia vanessae. Parasitoid success is expressed as the number of hosts from which adult solitary or gregarious parasitoids are developed. Parasitoid cocoon mortality is expressed as the number of developed cocoons from which adult parasitoids did not emerge. The host success is measured as the number of hosts that developed into adult moths, whether the host was parasitised or not. Host mortality is calculated from the number of hosts that died after parasitism without developing into a moth or parasitoid. Sample size = 20; replicates = 10. Notes: Means (±SE) within each variable response with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05) between host species. Parasitoid success and host mortality were analysed using ANOVA, and parasitoid cocoon mortality and host success were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples.	Fig. 3. Suitability parameters of hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites parasitised by Cotesia vanessae. Parasitoid success is expressed as the number of hosts from which adult solitary or gregarious parasitoids are developed. Parasitoid cocoon mortality is expressed as the number of developed cocoons from which adult parasitoids did not emerge. The host success is measured as the number of hosts that developed into adult moths, whether the host was parasitised or not. Host mortality is calculated from the number of hosts that died after parasitism without developing into a moth or parasitoid. Sample size = 20; replicates = 10. Notes: Means (±SE) within each variable response with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05) between host species. Parasitoid success and host mortality were analysed using ANOVA, and parasitoid cocoon mortality and host success were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples.	2020-10-21	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos		Zenodo	biologists	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos			
038A87F6FF86FFA3FF39F9DD4775FE10.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/15701469/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15701469	Fig. 2. Development times in days for Campoletis sonorensis and Cotesia vanessae on Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites. White: days from oviposition to cocoon formation; light grey: days from cocoon to adult emergence; dark grey: days from oviposition to adult emergence. Means (±SE) with the same letter within each parasitoid species are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples for each parasitoid species and each parasitoid development stage separately.	Fig. 2. Development times in days for Campoletis sonorensis and Cotesia vanessae on Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites. White: days from oviposition to cocoon formation; light grey: days from cocoon to adult emergence; dark grey: days from oviposition to adult emergence. Means (±SE) with the same letter within each parasitoid species are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples for each parasitoid species and each parasitoid development stage separately.	2020-10-21	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos		Zenodo	biologists	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos			
038A87F6FF84FFA3FF39FD9A4418F9E6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/15701473/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15701473	Fig. 4. Suitability parameters of hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites parasitised by Copidosoma floridanum. Host mortality is expressed as the number of hosts that died after parasitism without developing into moths or parasitoids. The host success is measured as the number of hosts that develop into adult moths, whether the host was parasitised or not. Sample size = 50; replicates = 10. Notes: Means (±SE) with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using ANOVA for each variable response between host species separately.	Fig. 4. Suitability parameters of hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites parasitised by Copidosoma floridanum. Host mortality is expressed as the number of hosts that died after parasitism without developing into moths or parasitoids. The host success is measured as the number of hosts that develop into adult moths, whether the host was parasitised or not. Sample size = 50; replicates = 10. Notes: Means (±SE) with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using ANOVA for each variable response between host species separately.	2020-10-21	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos		Zenodo	biologists	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos			
038A87F6FF84FFA3FF39FD9A4418F9E6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/15701475/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15701475	Fig. 5. Development times for hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites that survived parasitism by Copidosoma floridanum and for nonparasitised hosts. White: days from oviposition to pupa formation; light grey: days from pupa to adult emergence; dark grey: days from oviposition to adult emergence. Letters outside parentheses indicate a comparison between host species inside each group (parasitised or nonparasitised). Letters inside parentheses indicate a comparison between parasitised and nonparasitised within host species.Means (±SE) with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples by developmental parameters separately, as indicated above for letters outside and inside parentheses.	Fig. 5. Development times for hosts Trichoplusia ni and Chrysodeixis chalcites that survived parasitism by Copidosoma floridanum and for nonparasitised hosts. White: days from oviposition to pupa formation; light grey: days from pupa to adult emergence; dark grey: days from oviposition to adult emergence. Letters outside parentheses indicate a comparison between host species inside each group (parasitised or nonparasitised). Letters inside parentheses indicate a comparison between parasitised and nonparasitised within host species.Means (±SE) with the same letter are not significantly different (P> 0.05). Parameters were analysed using Mann–Whitney U tests for independent samples by developmental parameters separately, as indicated above for letters outside and inside parentheses.	2020-10-21	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos		Zenodo	biologists	Pacheco, Henry Murillo;Vanlaerhoven, Sherah;Garcia, M. Angeles Marcos			
