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- Parasitoid and chalcid wasps - Chalcidoidea
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Bees, Wasps, Ants
Parasitoid and chalcid wasps - Chalcidoidea
Chalcid wasps (from the Latin, "chalcis" - metallic-coloured) are a very complex and species-rich group with constantly evolving taxonomy. In the UK, 1,754 recorded species were on the 2016 checklist, although this is certainly an underestimate of the total. All are endoparasitoids, the females laying eggs inside host eggs or larvae, which their larvae consume and kill. These tiny wasps often have a wide global distribution and in addition have been very widely used as biological pest control.
Chalcididae - Chalcid wasps
The family Chalcididae is a subgroup group within the superfamily Chalcidoidea. Chalcididae are generally slightly larger, sturdier and have a more "armored" appearance than other Chalcidid families. The hind femur is greatly enlarged and muscular and the hind tibiae characteristically bowed to fit snugly against the swollen femur when the leg is retracted.
Mymaridae - Fairy wasps
The fairy wasps are some of the smallest insects in the world but have been widely used in biological pest control. One North American species, Dicopomorpha echmepterygis, is only twice the width of a human hair. They are endoparasitoids on a wide range of insect hosts. One UK species, Caraphractus cinctus, lives underwater and is a parasitoid of water beetle eggs.
Encyrtidae
A large family of tiny wasps and one of the most important for biological control. e.g. Trichogramma evanescens is used to control Clothes Moths and Encarsia formosa used to control greenhouse whitefly - these are among the few wasps you can buy on Amazon.
Eulophidae
Eulophid wasps are endoparasites larvae, pupae and sometimes eggs of insects in over ten orders. They are major parasitoids of Leafminers (Diptera), Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, and Hemiptera. They are crucial in natural ecosystems and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) for controlling various insect pests, particularly leaf miners, beetles, and gall-formers. A few species cause plant galls.
Eurytomidae - wasps
Eurytomidae are a diverse family of small, primarily non-metallic, black or dark-colored parasitic and phytophagous wasps. They are characterized by a coarse, pitted thorax. While many are parasites of larvae hidden within plant tissues (galls, seeds, stems), a significant number are phytophagous (feeding on plants), and some are specialized predators of spider eggs.
Ormyridae - parasitic wasps
The Ormyridae are either parasitoids or hyperparasitoids on gall-forming insects, primarily cynipid wasps and tephritid flies, typically metallic or iridescent in appearance.
Pteromalidae
This is a very large and diverse family of wasps (one of the most species-rich families) of rather uncertain taxonomy, having been included in other families and split off again a number of times. Their biology is very varies and includes ectoparasitoids and endoparasitoids, hyperparasitoids and even predators that kill and consume the prey immediately; they also include fig wasp genera.
Torymidae
A diverse family of chalcid wasps that can be easily recognized by their metallic body color, large hind coxae, and long ovipositor in females, which is used to deposit eggs onto or into their hosts. Torymidae specialize in parasitizing hosts in concealed habitats including gall-forming insects.





















