Parasitism Potential of Egg Parasitoid, Trichogramma chilonis against Spodoptera frugiperda on Maize

Authors

  • Muhammad Ishtiaq Author
  • Shoaib Jahangir Author
  • Umer Sharif Institute of Plant Protection, Muhammad Nawaz Shareef University of Agriculture Multan Author
  • Umair Faheem Author
  • Muhammad Rafiq Shahid Author
  • Naeem Ahmad Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55627/agribiol.003.01.1859

Keywords:

Biological control, Integrated pest management, Egg parasitism, Host preference

Abstract

The fall armyworm (FAW), Spodoptera frugiperda, is highly destructive polyphagous and invasive insect pest of maize, causing considerable yield losses and is becoming increasingly difficult to manage due to over-reliance on chemical insecticides and the development of resistance. Egg parasitoids such as Trichogramma chilonis offer a promising approach for the biological control of this pest through sustainable integrated pest management (IPM). Although Trichogramma spp. are recognized as effective parasitoids of lepidopteran pests, there is limited local data on their efficacy, host preference, age-specific performance, and field application of T. chilonis against S. frugiperda on maize under Pakistani conditions. In this study, both laboratory and field experiments were conducted to evaluate the efficacy of T. chilonis against FAW. Laboratory tests assessed parasitism and emergence at different of FAW eggs (20-100 eggs), host preference between S. frugiperda and Sitotroga cerealella, the effect of parasitoid female age (24 h vs. 48 h), and the influence of host egg age. Field trials compared different frequencies and numbers of Trichogramma card applications in maize plots. Results indicated that parasitism rates increased with egg density with a maximum parasitism of 46.1 observed at 100 eggs per female. T. chilonis exhibited a preference for S. cerealella eggs over FAW eggs and demonstrated higher parasitism on fresh FAW eggs compared to older eggs, while 48-hour-old female parasitoids outperformed 24-hour-old females. In field trials, deploying two Trichogramma cards per week resulted in the greatest reduction in FAW larval populations and the least amount of plant damage. These findings highlight that T. chilonis is a promising biocontrol agent against FAW and can be effectively integrated into IPM programs through frequent releases of Trichogramma cards.

Author Biographies

  • Muhammad Ishtiaq

    Department of Entomology, MNS-University of Agriculture, Multan, Punjab Pakistan

  • Shoaib Jahangir

    Department of Entomology, MNS-University of Agriculture, Multan, Punjab, Pakistan

  • Umair Faheem

    Barani Agricultural Research Institute, Chakwal, Punjab, Pakistan

  • Muhammad Rafiq Shahid

    Cotton Research Institute, Multan, Punjab, Pakistan

  • Naeem Ahmad

    Department of Entomology, MNS-University of Agriculture, Multan, Punjab, Pakistan

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Published

2025-04-23

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

Parasitism Potential of Egg Parasitoid, Trichogramma chilonis against Spodoptera frugiperda on Maize (M. Ishtiaq, S. Jahangir, U. Sharif, U. Faheem, M. R. Shahid, & N. Ahmad, Trans.). (2025). Journal of Agriculture and Biology, 3(1), 386-393. https://doi.org/10.55627/agribiol.003.01.1859

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