Abstract

Aphelinus certus Yasnosh (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae) is an accidentally introduced parasitoid of the soybean aphid, Aphis glycines Matsumura (Hemiptera: Aphididae) in North America and it has become one of the most common natural enemies of soybean aphids in its adventive range. It is unclear, however, if increased prevalence of A. certus has resulted in increased biological control. We conducted an exclusion-cage experiment designed to isolate the impact of parasitoids from that of other resident natural enemies (mainly predators) of the soybean aphid. We found that A. certus greatly outnumbered all other soybean aphid parasitoids, and that it significantly reduced soybean aphid populations over a time span of less than two weeks compared to controls. Moreover, parasitoids alone resulted in aphid densities that were statistically equivalent to the combined effect of predators and parasitoids. Across all treatment cages, there was a significant negative association between parasitism rate and aphid population growth, with predicted zero aphid growth occurring at a parasitism rate of 42.2%.

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