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Abstract Why and how herbivorous insects choose to feed on some plant species and not others can be influenced by many factors; however, it is not always clear why herbivorous insects will choose to lay their eggs on some plants over others. The Hopkins’ host selection principle (hereafter HHSP) hypothesizes that female insects prefer to lay eggs on host plants upon which they fed as larvae, but there are studies that both support and refute the hypothesis. Here, we test HHSP in a dietary generalist moth, fall webworm (Hyphantria cunea, hereafter FW). Previously, local host plant abundance has been the only factor found to determine FW host plant use; whether FW exhibit individual host plant preferences is unknown. We conducted preference tests with females of the two FW morphotypes (red-head and black-head), presenting females with four host plants: their one natal host plant, two other potential host plants, and one non-host plant for that morphotype that is a host plant for the other morphotype. Overwhelmingly, females of both morphotypes oviposited on a non-plant surface in the choice arena and those that did oviposit on a plant did not distinguish between host plants and non-host plants. Of the few FW females that oviposited on a host plant, only red-head females showed preference for their natal hosts. Our results support previous findings that HHSP is not a strong driver of host plant selection, suggesting that female FW are not selective in their choice of host plants, which may facilitate generalism in this species.more » « less
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