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Arthropods
- Flies (order Diptera) -- Tachinid flies (Tachinidae) are one of the largest and most beneficial families of Diptera. These flies attack larvae of Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera (sawflies), Coleoptera, and occasionally the nymphs of Orthoptera or Hemiptera. The Bombyliidae (bee flies) and Pipunculidae (big-headed flies) are also parasites of insect pests.
- Wasps (order Hymenoptera) -- There are over 45 families of small to medium-sized wasps that parasitize other insects. The largest and most important of these families include the Braconidae, Ichneumonidae, Trichogrammatidae, Eulophidae, Encyrtidae, Aphelinidae, Chalcididae, Evaniidae, Scoliidae Pteromalidae, Mymaridae, Scelionidae, Mutillidae, Tiphiidae, Bethylidae, Chrysididae, Platygastridae, and Dryinidae.
Roundworms
- Nematodes (phylum Nematoda) -- There are over 300 species of nematodes (in 19 families) that are known to attack insects. Most of the research in biological control, however, has focused on only two genera, Steinernema and Heterorhabditis. These nematodes are unique because they harbor symbiotic bacteria that are pathogenic to the nematode's insect host.
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