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Hymenopteran endoparasitoids that develop inside their lepidopteran host may exert a multitude of interactions with their host until they are able to emerge successfully from a developmentally arrested host that finally dies. Parasitoid interferences comprise physiological and biochemical modifications in the host endocrine and immune system which in turn affect host growth and development (reviewed in Edwards & Weaver, 2001). We use the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar (Lep., Lymantriidae) and the endoparasitic, polydnavirus (PDV)-carrying braconid wasp Glyptapanteles liparidis (Hym., Braconidae) as a model system to study the endocrine changes associated with parasitism. Following wasp oviposition into young gypsy moth larvae, the parasitoids develop through two endoparasitic instars, and then emerge as newly molted third instars from a host that dies in the larval stage. In previous studies we have already described the endocrine changes in parasitized gypsy moth larvae which show an increase in juvenile hormone (JH) titers, a shift from JH II to JH III as the dominant homologue, and a prominent decrease in the JH degrading enzymes (Schopf & al., 1996; Schafellner & al., 2004). Here, we investigated the possible mechanisms that account for the JH elevating effects such as (i) stimulated host corpora allata activity, (ii) reduced activity of the JH metabolic enzymes such as JH esterase, and (iii) synthesis and release of JH by the parasitoid larvae.