How to attract parasitic wasps

by: Linda Gilkeson | Image: istock/Bruce Johnston
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Caterpillars have deadly little enemies in the form of tiny parasitic wasps (many only 3 to 5 mm/0.1 to 0.2 in long). These wasps search diligently, leaf by leaf, throughout plants, looking for cabbage loopers, cabbage worms, tent caterpillars and other hosts in which to lay their eggs.

The wasp larvae develop inside the caterpillar’s body, eventually killing it. Some species then spin their small white cocoons outside the remains of their host, while others remain inside the host cocoon until emerging as adults. One female wasp can parasitize 200 to 300 caterpillars in her short lifespan, making these parasites very valuable allies in our yards.

parasitic wasp

An adult parasitic wasp

Unlike the much bigger yellowjackets, parasitic wasps do not sting people. The female wasps dine only on pollen and nectar, so you can attract them by growing plants with tiny, nectar-rich flowers in the garden: thymes, lovage, savory and other herbs, sweet alyssum, dill, cilantro, parsley, yarrow, candytuft, verbena, goldenrod.


—Linda Gilkeson, PhD
author of
West Coast Gardening: Natural Insect, Weed & Disease Control


Comments

As for what an adult wasp

Comment by Anonymous, October 13, 2009 at 11:42

As for what an adult wasp looks like, there are several families of wasps (order Hymenoptera) I.E. Ichneumonidae, so the looks change depending on the family. But as a wasp, they resemble a wasp in aperance. As listed in the article, they are tiny so they are a little difficult to spot. You can Google the order Hymenoptera and find what you are looking for, or Google the family. Male Parasitic wasps, unlike females, do not have an ovipositor (egg laying device/stinger) so they will never hurt YOU, and even at that, the females will rarely sting you. They are not like the agressive paper wasps which will sting anything too close to its nest. Remember, animals which use venom use it to kill prey, so they only use it when agitated, threatened, or feeding. Happy gardening.

_Bio. Student_

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what about the male

Comment by Anonymous, March 15, 2009 at 20:42

what about the male parasitic wasps?

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I have just recently

Comment by Anonymous, March 9, 2009 at 10:59

I have just recently introduced Encarsia Formosa into my greenhouse also wandering if what I see on the cards are developing adults..Annie , Gibsons B.C. Canada

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Hi: Would like to see what

Comment by Anonymous, January 16, 2009 at 17:42

Hi: Would like to see what an adult wasp looks like so I can be on the lookout for it? I try to attract the good bugs to my garden and I'm an organic gardener so want all the help I can get from Nature. Pat, Langley, BC. Canada

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