They parasitize certain species of the fig wasp genera Apocryptophagus and Ceratosolen.[3] The long ovipositor is pierced through the fig wall to infect the fig wasp larvae during their development inside the flower galls.[4] Penetration of the syconium wall may last from 6 to 55 minutes,[2] depending on the wasp and fig species.
Ceratosolen wasps are key pollinator species, and their production is consequently reduced.[5]Apocryptophagus wasps are however gall forming non-pollinators. Some differences in Apocrypta behaviour and morphology reflect the variety in fig inflorescence morphology.[2]
The adult female has an elongate external ovipositor, some 2 to 5 mm long, which reflects the thickness of the syconium wall of the host fig species. To stabilize the long ovipositor during oviposition, the proximal gastral segments can telescope outwards as the abdomen is lifted up, which in some species leans forward beyond the head.[2] The ovipositor is enclosed and guided by a flexible ovipositor sheath. As in several genera of parasitic wasp, the highly flexible sheath supports the ovipositor's tip during the initial stages of oviposition.[2][6] In some species, such as Apocrypta westwoodi, the ovipositor has zinc-hardened drill bits.[7]