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Manage Insects On Your Farm: A Guide to Ecological Strategies
Cropping Systems Shape Parasitoid Diversity
Most parasitoids used in the biological control of insect pests
are either Diptera flies–especially from the family Tachinidae—or
Hymenoptera wasps from the superfamilies Chalcidoidea, Ichneumonoidea
and Proctotrupoidea (Table 4).
Parasitoid diversity is directly related to plant diversity: different
crops, ground covers, weeds and adjacent vegetation support different
pests, which in turn attract their own groups of parasitoids.
In large-scale monocultures, parasitoid diversity is suppressed
by vegetational simplification; in less-disturbed and pesticide-free
agroecosystems, it is not unusual to find 11 to15 species of parasitoids
hard at work. In many cases, just one or two species of parasitoids
within these complexes prove vital to the natural biological control
of primary insect pests.
In California’s alfalfa fields, the braconid wasp Cotesia
medicaginis plays a pivotal role in regulating the alfalfa
caterpillar. This pristine butterfly-wasp system apparently moved
into irrigated alfalfa from native clovers.