Parasitoid fauna of the serpentine leafminer Liriomyza trifolii (Burgess) was surveyed in Okinawa Is., Miyako Is. and Ishigaki Is. in southern Japan from November through December 1997. A total of 12 species of parasitoids were recorded as natural enemies of L. trifolii; including one Braconidae, one Eucoilidae, two Pteromalidae, and eight Eulophidae (7 genera). All dominating species were members of the Eulophidae. In the field, Neochrysocharis formosa was the most dominant species among the three islands, and the second most dominant species was Hemiptarsenus varicornis in Okinawa Is., Neochrysocharis okazakii in Miyako Is. and Chrysocharis pentheus in Ishigaki Is. On the other hand, in a vinyl greenhouse, the dominant species were H. varicornis and N. formosa in Okinawa Is., and N. formosa and N. okazakii in Ishigaki Is. Sex ratios of the three main parasitoid species, N. varicornis, C. pentheus and N. okazakii, were nearly 0.5 for the three islands. However, the sex ratio of N. formosa was extremely female biased 0.996 in Okinawa Is., 0.86 in Miyako Is. and 0.97 in Ishigaki Is. These facts indicate that both sexual (arrhenotokous) and asexual (thelytokous) forms of N. formosa occur sympatrically, and the asexual strain predominated in populations of N. formosa.