Ganaspis individuals parasitizing
Drosophila suzukii (Matsumura), a pest of fruit crops, were examined for host use and molecular and morphological differences from those attacking
D. lutescens Okada and some other
Drosophila species that breed on fermenting fruits. Wild cherry fruits were collected in the suburbs of Tokyo, and drosophilid pupae obtained from these fruits were examined for parasitism.
Drosophila suzukii was the only drosophilid species infesting fresh wild cherry fruits, and
Ganaspis individuals were the major parasitoids attacking
D. suzukii in wild cherry fruits. In parasitism experiments, these
Ganaspis individuals parasitized
D. suzukii larvae in fresh cherry fruits, but did not parasitize those in Drosophila medium. In addition, they did not parasitize larvae of some other fruit-feeding
Drosophila species even when these occurred in fresh cherry fruit. These
Ganaspis individuals parasitizing
D. suzukii were different from those parasitizing
D. lutescens and some other drosophilids in nucleotide sequences of the COI gene, as well as in ITS1 and ITS2. They were also different in forewing and antenna morphology, although they showed some overlap in morphological traits. They are tentatively assigned as the
suzukii- and
lutescens-associated types of
G. xanthopoda Ashmead. In the present field survey,
Leptopilina japonica Novkovi? & Kimura and some
Asobara species were also observed to attack
D. suzukii larvae in wild cherry fruit.
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