Abstract

AbstractCotesia icipe Fernandez‐Triana & Fiaboe is a solitary koinobiont larval endoparasitoid, recently discovered in Kenya and new to science, that parasitizes select lepidopteran herbivores of amaranth. We investigated its host range on five commonly encountered amaranth lepidopteran defoliators. Cotesia icipe accepted, successfully and aggressively parasitized the amaranth noctuid defoliators Spodoptera littoralis (Boisduval) and Spodoptera exigua (Hübner), but failed to parasitize Herpetogramma bipunctalis (F.), Spoladea recurvalis (F.) and Udea ferrugalis (Hübner) all in Crambidae family. On S. littoralis, C. icipe was highly efficient, with 95% of females successfully ovipositing during 2 hr of exposure. Parasitism rate and larval and pupal non‐reproductive mortalities were significantly higher at higher parasitoid density. A single female of C. icipe parasitized 42.99 ± 2.66% of the 50 exposed larvae for oviposition in 24 hr, whereas a cohort of five females of C. icipe conferred 85.59 ± 1.46% parasitism rate. The efficiency ratio per female was much higher in single releases than in cohort releases while a balanced sex ratio was obtained in F1 offspring regardless of the density of female released. The potential use of C. icipe for conservation and augmentative biological control of S. littoralis in amaranth as well as its potential use against other Noctuid moths and in other commodities is discussed.

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