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Encarsia formosa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Species of wasp

Encarsia formosa
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Order:Hymenoptera
Family:Aphelinidae
Subfamily:Coccophaginae
Genus:Encarsia
Species:
E. formosa
Binomial name
Encarsia formosa
Gahan, 1924

Encarsia formosa is a species ofchalcidoidwasp and a well knownparasitoid ofgreenhouse whitefly, one of the first to be used commercially forbiological pest control, from the 1920s. Its use fell with commercial pesticides in the 1940s, but rose again from the 1970s.

Description

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The tiny females (about 0.6 mm long) are black with a yellow abdomen and opalescent wings. The species reproduces asexually viathelytoky induced byWolbachia infection. Males are produced but are unable to inseminate the females.[1]

The adults use theclap and fling flight mechanism often seen in sub-mm insects.[2]

Tomato leaf withwhitefly nymphs (white), some of them visibly parasitized byE. formosa (black)

Life cycle

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Life cycles ofgreenhouse whitefly and its parasitoid waspEncarsia formosa

Females deposit 50-100 eggs individually inside the bodies ofnymphs orpupae of the host species. The wasp larvae develop through four instars in about two weeks at optimum temperatures. Parasitized greenhouse whitefly pupae turn black in about 10 days, while parasitized sweet potato whiteflies turn amber brown. Both are easily distinguished from unparasitized host pupae. Wasp pupation occurs within the whitefly body. Adult wasps emerge about 10 days later.E. formosa can use at least 15 species ofwhitefly as its host, includingBemisia tabaci andAleyrodes proletella.[1]

Use in biological control

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The parasitoid is sold commercially forbiological control ofwhitefly, aninsect pest of tomato and othergreenhouse crops.

Encarsia formosa has been used as a natural pesticide to controlwhitefly populations ingreenhouses since the 1920s. Use of the insect fell out of fashion due to the increased prevalence of chemical pesticides and was essentially non-existent by the 1940s. Since the 1970sE. formosa has seen something of a revival, with renewed usage in European and Russian greenhouses.[1] In some countries, such as New Zealand, it is the primary biological control agent used to control greenhouse whiteflies, particularly on crops such as tomato which is a difficult plant for predators to establish themselves on.[3]

References

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  1. ^abcHoddle, M. S.; Van Driesche, R. G.; Sanderson, J. P. (1998)."Biology and Use of the Whitefly ParasitoidEncarsia Formosa"(PDF).Annual Review of Entomology.43 (1):645–669.doi:10.1146/annurev.ento.43.1.645.PMID 15012401. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 12 November 2004.
  2. ^Santhanankrishnan, A.; Jones, S.; Low, A.A; Gadi, S.; Hedrick, T.L.; Miller, L. (2014)."Clap and fling mechanism with interacting porous wings in tiny insect flight".The Journal of Experimental Biology.217 (21):3898–3909.doi:10.1242/jeb.084897.PMID 25189374.
  3. ^Bioforce Limited, New Zealand
Encarsia formosa
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