The current laboratory study was designed to evaluate the effect of abiotic and biotic factors such as temperature, light intensity, relative humidity and host age on biological and ecological characteristics of Aphelinus asychis (Walker) parasitizing Aphis gossypii (Glover). The traits studied were developmental duration, mortality, sex ratio, longevity, fecundity and host feeding. A. asychis can completely develop and reproduce at temperatures 18°C and 30°C, light intensities of 1000 and 7000 lux and relative humidities of 30% and 60%. Temperature had a significant effect on the developmental duration as well as on the percentage and longevity of females, while mortality from mummification to emergence, fecundity and host feeding were only slightly affected. Relative humidity only affected the developmental duration of A. asychis. Light intensity had mostly affected the biological and ecological traits of A. asychis. High light intensity resulted in a shorter developmental duration, higher incidence of females and longer life span of the female parasitoid. A high tolerance to climatic variations and life cycle well adapted to this aphid host are properties that make it likely that A. asychis could be used for the biological control of the cotton aphid in greenhouses.
Gronotoma micromorpha is a solitary egg-pupal and larval-pupal parasitoid. In a previous study, the developmental time of this parasitoid decreased with the age of its leaf miner host, Liriomyza trifolii, being significantly longer when the host was 0-day old (= 0-24 h old egg) than when 4 days old (mature larva) at the time of parasitization at 25°C. In the present study, the suitability and acceptability of 0 and 4 day old L. trifolii as hosts for G. micromorpha, and the ovipositional preference of this parasitoid for these two developmental stages of the host were examined. No significant difference was found in the size of the parasitoid offspring that emerged from hosts parasitized at these two developmental stages. There was no significant difference in the acceptability of the two developmental stages of L. trifolii in no choice tests, but 4 day old larvae were preferred to 0 day old eggs in choice tests. Moreover, parasitization of eggs by G. micromorpha did not appear to result in more of the eggs dying before they hatched. Non-reproductive killing (host feeding and host stinging without oviposition) of host eggs by this parasitoid was also not detected.