Interspecific competition between endo- and ectoparasitoids attacking Tuta absoluta
Publication date
2026-05-13ISSN
1612-4758
Abstract
Tuta absoluta is a major pest threatening tomato crops worldwide. In the Mediterranean basin, biological control mainly relies on zoophytophagous predators which coexist with larval parasitoids, the native ectoparasitoid Necremnus tutae and the recently established South American endoparasitoid Dolichogenidea gelechiidivoris. Although both are effective natural enemies of T. absoluta, their interactions remain poorly understood. Here, we explored the potential competitive outcomes between these two parasitoids through no-choice, choice, and behavior experiments. In single-species assays, D. gelechiidivoris exhibited high larval parasitism (92%) and effectively reduced T. absoluta densities, whereas N. tutae relied more on host-feeding and host-killing behaviors with lower parasitism (48%). When the parasitoids co-occurred, T. absoluta mortality increased to ~ 80% while parasitism for each species decreased by well over 50%. Necremnus tutae also showed a preference for host-feeding or killing larvae previously exposed to D. gelechiidivoris. This elevated larval mortality was likely driven by high probing activity from D. gelechiidivoris in combination with continued host-feeding and host-killing by N. tutae. Our findings demonstrated interspecific competition between the two larval parasitoids, emphasizing the importance of considering such dynamics when integrating them into biological control programs against T. absoluta.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
632 - Plant damage, injuries. Plant diseases. Pests, organisms injurious to plants. Plant protection
Pages
11
Publisher
Springer
Is part of
Journal of Pest Science
Program
Protecció Vegetal Sostenible
Recommended citation
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3691]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


