Abstract

Abstract The attraction of Cotesia flavipes Cameron to volatiles from a range of non-target lepidopteran larvae and their host plants (grasses and trees) or food substrate (honeycomb) was evaluated using a Y-tube olfactometer. The non-target host larvae used in the study included Galleria mellonella (L.), Charaxes cithaeron Felder, Bombyx mori L., and Eldana saccharina Walker. The target insects, Chilo partellus (Swinhoe) and Chilo orichalcociliellus (Strand), were used as controls. Host plants included Afzelia quanzensis Welw., Morus alba L., Cyperus papyrus L., Pennisetum purpureum Schumach, and Zea mays L. The response of C. flavipes to volatiles from the non-target larvae and their food was variable. Attraction to uninfested maize was not significantly different from uninfested plants of non-target hosts or honeycomb. Only maize and honeycomb were preferred over clean air. C. partellus infested maize plants were significantly more attractive than M. alba, A. quanzensis, and honeycomb infested with their herbivores. Infested maize and C. papyrus were more attractive than uninfested ones. When odors from naked larvae were tested, C. flavipes preferred odors from C. partellus larvae over those of E. saccharina and C. cithaeron and larvae of C. partellus and G. mellonella were preferred to clean air. The implications of these findings for biological control and its effect on non-target organisms are discussed.

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