Studies of relative toxicity of the organophosphate insecticides disulfoton, ethion, methyl-parathion e chlorpyrifos to the predatory wasps Brachygastra lecheguana Latreille, Polybia paulista Ihering e Protopolybia exigua Saussure and their prey, the coffee leaf-miner Leucoptera coffeella (Guérin-Mèneville), were carried out in laboratory. The concentrations which killed 99% of individuals of L. coffeella were: 0.08; 83.95; 0.43; 0.07 mg i.a/cm² of disulfoton, ethion, methyl-parathion and chlorpyrifos, respectively. These concentrations were used to assess the selectivity of insecticides in impregnated paper filter assays. Methyl-parathion and chlorpyrifos were highly toxic to these wasp species, while disulfoton and ethion were selective in their favour.
Insecta; toxicity; natural enemies; coffee leaf-miner; organophosphates