Pteromalus Pupal Wasp vs Cinnamon Tachinid
Side-by-side species comparison
| Attribute | Pteromalus Pupal Wasp | Cinnamon Tachinid |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Pteromalus puparum | Adejeania vexatrix |
| Order | Hymenoptera | Diptera |
| Family | Pteromalidae | Tachinidae |
| Size | 2-3 mm | 12-16 mm |
| Habitat | Farmland | Grasslands |
| Diet | Parasitoids | Parasitoids |
| Regions | Europe, North America, Asia, Oceania | North America |
| Conservation | Not Evaluated | Least Concern |
Pteromalus Pupal Wasp
A small metallic-green parasitoid that attacks butterfly and moth pupae, particularly those of cabbage whites. Multiple wasps develop within a single host pupa.
Did You Know?
Up to 200 tiny wasps can emerge from a single cabbage white butterfly chrysalis.
Cinnamon Tachinid
A large, robust tachinid fly with reddish-brown coloring and prominent bristles. It is a common parasitoid of armyworm caterpillars in western North American grasslands.
Did You Know?
It is considered one of the most important natural enemies of armyworm outbreaks in North American rangelands.