Abstract

Two primary parasitoids of the mealybug Rastrococcus invadens Williams, (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae), Gyranusoidea tebygi Noyes and Anagyrus mangicola Noyes (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae), were studied. Both primary parasitoids were capable of eliminating the mealybug host but on occasions the parasitoids went extinct before the mealybugs. Three of four parasitoids known to attack G. tebygi also attacked A. mangicola. The latter species was more heavily parasitized than the former, especially by the gregarious species Chartocerus hyalipennis Hayat. In competition experiments the presence of hyperparasitoids slightly slowed the speed of extinction of either the mealybug or the primary parasitoid. A. mangicola was heavily parasitized by C. hyalipennis and the primary went extinct while many suitable mealybug hosts were still available. There were two situations where the primary parasitoids were in direct competition; in the first G. tebygi was more successful than A. mangicola while the reverse was true for the second. It is likely that the superiority of either parasitoid would depend on particular conditions but the introduction of A. mangicola is unlikely to lessen the control being exerted in West Africa by G. tebygi.

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