Documented parasitoid/host pairs

Below are a couple of references that list documented parasitoid/host pairs involving lepidoptera. The list in the Tuskes book has notes referring to the primary literature for each parasitoid/host pair.

Arnaud, P.H. 1978. A host-parasite catalog of North American Tachinidae (Diptera). USDA Misc. Publ. no 1319. Washington, D.C.

Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, Jr., D.R. Smith, and B.D. Burks. 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Vol. 1, Symphyta and Apocrita (Parasitica). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.

Tuskes, P.M., J.P. Tuttle, and M.M. Collins. 1996. The Wild Silk Moths of North America, a Natural History of the Saturnidae of the United States and Canada [Appendix 1]. Cornell University Press.

Publicado el 24 de febrero de 2020 por d2b d2b

Comentarios

Karen Oberhauser, Dane Elmquist, Juan Manuel Perilla-López, Ilse Gebhard, Laura Lukens, John Stireman, Tachinid Fly (Diptera: Tachinidae) Parasitoids of Danaus plexippus (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae), Annals of the Entomological Society of America, Volume 110, Issue 6, November 2017, Pages 536–543, https://doi.org/10.1093/aesa/sax048

The second most common one appears to be Hyphantrophaga, which is a genus not yet on BugGuide and iNat!

Publicado por aispinsects hace alrededor de 4 años

These resources are crucial especially since it is so challenging to find correct information about tachinids on a quick internet search. I found one article that listed Musca domestica (the common housefly) as a Lepidoptera parasite which is certainly not the case! As we know tachinids are not houseflies in spite of a passing resemblance to them.

Publicado por botanicaltreasures hace alrededor de 4 años

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