Cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni (Hübner) is an important lepidopteran pest on many vegetable and
greenhouse crops, and some field crops. Although there are no commercial transgenic Bt vegetable or
greenhouse crops, T. ni is a target of Bollgard II cotton, which produces Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab. We expand
on previous work that examined the effect of Bt crops on parasitoids using Bt-resistant lepidopteran
populations as hosts. Cry1Ac/Cry2Ab-resistant T. ni larvae were used to eliminate host quality effects
and to evaluate the direct effects of Bt cotton on the parasitoids Copidosoma floridanum (Ashmead)
and Cotesia marginiventris (Cresson). These tri-trophic studies confirm that Bt cotton had no significant
impact on development, success of parasitism, survival and adult longevity of C. marginiventris when
using Bt-resistant T. ni fed on Bt cotton. Similarly, this Bt cotton had no significant impact on the
development, mummy weight and the number of progeny produced by C. floridanum. Our studies
verified that lyophilized Bt crop tissue maintained its insecticidal bioactivity when incorporated into an
artificial diet, demonstrating that hosts and parasitoids were exposed to active Cry proteins. The egglarval
parasitoid C. floridanum, or similar species that consume their entire host, should be considered
useful surrogates in risk assessment of Bt crops to non-target arthropods.