Although sex determination is a fundamental biological process, the underlying mechanisms are remarkably diverse in insects. There is a plethora of instructor signals that start the sex determination pathway. In many species, this instruction is related to sex chromosomes. However, all insects in the order Hymenoptera, that have haplodiploid sex determination, do not have sex chromosomes; males are haploid and develop from unfertilized eggs, whereas females are diploid and develop from fertilized eggs. The only molecularly characterized instructor in Hymenoptera is that of the honeybee which has complementary sex determination (CSD). However, most parasitoid wasps, including Nasonia, do not have CSD. In this thesis, a novel hymenopteran ins...