Feeding experiments were conducted with Trichogramma platneri Nagarkatti (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) reared from the Angoumois grain moth, Sitotroga cerealella (Oliver) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae). T. platneri provisioned with host eggs do not live any longer than T. platneri without host eggs. Longevity of T. platneri is inversely related to temperature declining from 53 days at 10 °C to 3 days at 35 °C for honey‐fed parasitoids and from 9 days at 10 °C to 1 day at 35 °C for unfed parasitoids. Sugar sources are necessary to prolong longevity of T. platneri, but a source of amino acid did not promote longevity. Honey solutions greater than 10%, and 43% fructose and sucrose solutions increased longevity 10–13 fold to 15–20 days in comparison to water when fed daily to T. platneri. Parasitoids fed only at the onset of the trial had greater longevity than unfed parasitoids but had a shorter longevity than parasitoids fed daily, due to the evaporation of the sugar solutions and consumption of the honey. Aphid honeydew is a suitable field‐available sugar source supporting longevity up to 10 days, but is not as good as other sugar sources. Stabilizing additives did not reduce evaporation of a dilute sugar solution nor prolong longevity of T. platneri. Simulating a daily dew fall by misting vials, to redissolve the crystallized food residues left after providing food at the onset of the trial, failed to increase parasitoid longevity.
Trichogramma nr. brassicae is a common egg parasitoid of Helicoverpa species in Australian processing tomatoes, but its effectiveness can be severely curtailed by insecticide applications. To identify insecticides that are potentially compatible with this species, the effects of seven insecticides, including newly introduced compounds and a surfactant, were screened in laboratory and glasshouse assays for their toxicity to the wasps. Assays involved direct applications on adults, residual effects on adults, and applications on life stages still inside the host. Methoxyfenozide and indoxacarb were not toxic to Trichogramma in any assay when applied at field rates. Naled and chlorfenapyr caused 100% mortality when directly applied to adults, and 95% mortality when adults were exposed to residues of these chemicals within 24 h of application. The effects of naled residues were short lived (<48 h). Naled and chlorfenapyr were also toxic when applied to Trichogramma developing inside host eggs, reducing emergence of adults by >25%. Imidacloprid, emamectin, and tau-fluvalinate were toxic in some experiments; they caused >97% mortality in adults 1 h after direct application and in residue assays they caused 23-64% mortality during the first 24 h. In field trials, methoxyfenozide had no harmful effects on emergence from sprayed parasitized eggs, whereas indoxacarb had a small impact (<8%) on emergence. Methoxyfenozide and indoxacarb are potentially suitable for inclusion in integrated pest management strategies for management of Helicoverpa because they do not influence adult survival or development of immature stages, whereas other chemicals need to be treated cautiously.
Egg parasitoids of the genus Trichogramma are commonly released in inundative biological control programmes for lepidopteran pests in a range of cropping systems. In this study we evaluated the dispersal of Trichogramma platneri from a central release point in an apple orchard in relation to time and the number of parasitoids released. Dispersal was monitored by parasitism of codling moth eggs from an insectary culture-used as sentinel eggs. Higher release rates of T. platneri resulted in greater parasitism of sentinel eggs during the first 3 days, increasing from about 18% for a release rate of 5 400 to about 36% for a release rate of 32 400. T. platneri parasitized a greater percentage of sentinel eggs on the north side of the tree. Parasitism of sentinel eggs declined by 50% during the second 3 day period following release from a point source release in comparison to the first 3 day period. Parasitism of sentinel eggs declined from a mean of 62% at the point-source to less than 10% 14 m away during the first 3 days after release.
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