Predator Parasite or Pathogen? A slide show adventure in Biological Control Erica Jenkins, Michigan State University Pesticide Education.

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Presentation transcript:

Predator Parasite or Pathogen? A slide show adventure in Biological Control Erica Jenkins, Michigan State University Pesticide Education

Wasp larvae coming out of a caterpillar 1

Long-legged fly with a captured leafhopper 2

Wasps coming out of aphid bodies. 3

Wasp pupae on a caterpillar 4

Rove beetles eating a maggot 5

The top caterpillar is infected with a virus. 6

Green cloverworms infected with a fungus 7

A tiny wasp injects eggs into a plant bug nymph 8

A fly infected with a fungus 9

A scorpion eating a cricket 10

The Japanese beetle larva (grub) on the right has milky disease caused by a bacteria. 11

A spider eating an insect. 12

A lacewing larva eating an aphid 13 Howard Russel, Michigan State University

A spider eating a moth 14

A wasp lays eggs inside a gypsy moth caterpillar. 15

A big-eyed bug glues a whitefly to a leaf and eats it. 16