Abstract
Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann) or medfly is a polyphagous pest of fruit crops worldwide. The Asian-native larval parasitoid Diachasmimorpha longicaudata (Ashmead) is mass-reared at the San Juan Biofactory and is currently released for medfly control in Argentina. Information on parasitoid survival, reproduction, and population growth parameters is critical for optimizing the mass-rearing process and successfully achieving large-scale release. This study provides a first-time insight into the demography of two population lines of D. longicaudata: one mass-reared on medfly larvae of the Vienna-8 temperature-sensitive lethal genetic sexing strain and the other on larvae of the wild biparental medfly strain. The aim was to compare both parasitoid populations to improve mass-rearing quality and to assess performance on medfly in a semi-arid environment, typical of Argentina's central-western fruit-growing region. Tests were performed under laboratory and non-controlled environmental conditions in semi-field cages during three seasons. Dl((Cc-bip)) females exhibited higher reproductive potential than did Dl((Cc-tsl)) females under lab conditions. However, both Dl((Cc-bip)) and Dl((Cc-tsl)) were found to be similar high-quality females with high population growth rates in warm-temperate seasons, i.e., late spring and summer. Dl((Cc-bip)) females were only able to sustain low reproductive rates in early autumn, a colder season. These results are useful for improving the parasitoid mass production at the San Juan Biofactory and redesigning parasitoid release schedules in Argentina's irrigated, semi-arid, fruit-growing regions.