Biological Control
provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
Bracon celer is a parasitoid of olive fly, Bactrocera oleae (Rossi) and efforts have been made to introduce it from Africa (where it is native) to several countries in the Mediterranean Region. As noted by Silvestri, who first reared it in South Africa, it is a color-variable species.
Biology / Hosts
provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
Members of the genus Bracon are amongst the most commonly encountered parasitoids emerging from infested fruits in certain parts of the world (e. g. Subsaharan Africa). Most of these species are undoubtedly parasitoids of lepidopteran and coleopteran hosts, but specific host associations have rarely been made. Other genera of the Subfamily Braconinae have also been routinely reared from fruit, but host associations for most of these are also rarely reported. It is quite possible that some of the species in these other genera may attack fruit-infesting Tephritidae.
Biology and Behavior
provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
The species of Bracon that attack frugivorous tephritids are idiobiont ectoparasitoids of larvae. The female wasp paralyzes the host and the larva develops on it inside the fruit, eventually spinning a cocoon and emerging as adult wasps from the fruit. Sampling programs that rely on emergence of host larvae from fruit and subsequent isolation of puparia for emergence of flies and parasitoids will either underestimate or completely miss these parasitoids.
Description
provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
Members of the genus
Bracon_, though superficially resembling some of the Opiinae, can be distinguished by the venation of the hind wing, in which the subbasal cell (1, 2) (Fig. 6, lower left 0000223">corner) is distinctly smaller than it is in the Opiinae. All species of
Bracon lack the
occipital carina, whereas many of the Opiinae have the
occipital carina present laterally. The
labrum is exposed and distinctly concave in
Bracon (Fig. 3) relative to members of the Opiinae, but this difference may not always be apparent until some familiarity with the variation in Opiinae is acquired.
Remarks
provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
The genus Bracon is one of the largest in the family Braconidae, with over 2000 described species. Two species, Bracon celer Szépligeti from Subsaharan Africa and Bracon fletcheri Silvestri from India have been reared from tephritid pests as part of biological control programs directed against species in the genus Bactrocera.