Tamarixia radiata

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Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Family:Eulophidae
Tamarixia radiata
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Eulophidae
Genus: Tamarixia
Species:
T. radiata
Binomial name
Tamarixia radiata
(Waterston, 1922)
Synonyms[1]
  • Tetrastichus indicus Khan & Shafee, 1981
  • Tetrastichus radiatus Waterston, 1922

Tamarixia radiata, the Asian citrus psyllid parasitoid, is a parasitoid wasp from the family Eulophidae which was discovered in the 1920s in the area of northwestern India (Punjab), now Pakistan. It is a parasitoid of the Asian citrus psyllid (Diaphorina citri), an economically important pest of citrus crops around the world and a vector for Citrus greening disease.

The adults of Tamarixia radiata are small, 0.92 to 1.04 mm long, black wasps. They have widely separated eyes, which are red in newly emerged adults,[2] on a head which is slightly wider than its length, and transparent wings with pale yellow veins. There is marked sexual dimorphism, with the male antennae being one and a half times the length of female antennae.[3] The antennae of the males have long and slightly curved setae while female antennae have short setae.[4] The males are also slightly smaller than females in length and have smaller wings and darker abdomens.[2] On the females, the ovipositor barely protrudes.[3] In both males and females the head and thorax are shiny black and the posterior dorsal and lateral portions of the gastric segments are black and the vent and a patch on the anterior dorsal gaster are pale, sometime yellow.[4] The legs are off white in colour.[2]

Distribution

Tamarixia radiata was initially described as Tetrastichus radiatus in 1922 by the British entomologist James Waterston from specimens collected in 1921 from part of the Punjab which is now in Pakistan.[5] The natural range of T. radiata extends from Yemen and Saudi Arabia in the west to China and Indonesia in the east.[6] When it was reported that this species was a highly efficient parasitoid of Diaphorina citri on the French Mascarene island of Réunion,[7] it was spread around the world to control its host. T. radiata has since been introduced or spread to Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Guadeloupe, Mauritius, Mexico, Philippines, Taiwan, Vietnam, Puerto Rico and the United States.[3][6]

Biology

Use as a biological control

References

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