Encarsia perplexa

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Encarsia perplexa
Adult Encarsia perplexa with eggs and hatching nymphs of citrus blackfly parasite
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Aphelinidae
Subfamily: Coccophaginae
Genus: Encarsia
Species:
E. perplexa
Binomial name
Encarsia perplexa
Huang & Polaszek, 1998
Synonyms

Encarsia opulenta

Encarsia perplexa is a tiny parasitic wasp, a parasitoid of the citrus blackfly, Aleurocanthus woglumi, which is a global pest of citrus trees. It was originally misidentified as Encarsia opulenta, but was recorded as a new species in 1998. It is a native of Asia but has been introduced to many other parts of the world as a means of controlling the citrus blackfly.[1]

This wasp is a native of India and Vietnam.[2] It has been introduced to and has established itself in Barbados, Cuba, Jamaica, Mexico, Salvador, Venezuela, the USA (Florida, Texas and Hawaii), Kenya and Oman, for the purpose of controlling citrus blackfly.[1]

Description

The female is just over one millimetre long with antennae 0.8 millimetre in length. The thorax is straw coloured, the wings are transparent with a smoky patch in the centre and the legs are whitish. The abdomen is straw-coloured at the front and dark brown behind with a dark-coloured ovipositor 0.5 millimetres long. The male is smaller, averaging 0.75 millimetres in length and is a uniform dark brown.[3]

Life cycle

Use in biological control

References

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