“…Under laboratory conditions, omnivorous and nematophagous predators can be voracious feeders. In assays with raw field soil, the presence of astigmatid mites in the genus Sancassania (Sarcoptiformes: Acaridae) greatly reduced IJ production by S. carpocapsae, S. riobrave, and H. bacteriophora in G. mellonella (Greenwood et al, 2011; also see Cakmak, Hazir, Ulug, & Karagoz, 2013;Ekmen, Hazir, Cakmak, Ozer, Karagoz, et al, 2010;Karagoz, Gulcu, Cakmak, Kaya, & Hazir, 2007). Many nematophagous species have rapid development and high reproductive rates, exhibit some degree of specificity towards nematodes, and are capable of reproducing rapidly by parthenogenesis (e.g., mesostigmatid mites).…”