“…Further, egg laying site selection is important in providing an adequate place for the subsequent success of larval development (Storey-Palma et al, 2014). Therefore, many Lepidopteran insects such as the leaf miner, Angelabella tecomae, the Bertha armyworm, Mamestra configurata and the Beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua, lay eggs on the underside of host plant leaves, where eggs and the emerging larvae are protected from high temperatures, sunlight, wind, predators and parasitoids (Ulmer et al, 2003;Azidah and Sofian-Azirun, 2006;Storey-Palma et al, 2014) . However, the majority of Lepidoptera lay eggs singly and the larvae develop solitarily (Stamp, 1980;Hebert, 1983;Ulmer et al, 2003).…”