Augmentative biological control of insects is a tool of Integrated Pest Management programs. In many agroecosystems, biological control is exercised largely by parasitoids, and it is found that the presence of food resources, as provided by flowering plants, can have a positive effect on survival, search ability and parasitism rate of parasitoid species. In Colombia, a recently established export crop, the cape gooseberry, is under continuous attack by a Lepidopteran species complex in the family Noctuidae. Our first objective was to test the longevity and parasitism rates of three species of egg parasitoids in the genus Trichogramma (Trichogramma atopovirilia Oatman & Platner, Trichogramma exiguum Pinto & Platner, and Trichogramma pretiosum Riley) for Spodoptera frugiperda Smith and Copitarsia decolora Gueené. Our results suggest that T. atopovirilia and T. pretiosum could be promising parasitoids for the control of S. frugiperda and C. decolora, with a percentage parasitism of between 30% and 60%, respectively. For our second objective, we selected T. atopovirilia as a model species to evaluate the effect of the presence of flowering plants on the longevity and parasitism rate in both, no choice and multiple choice experiments, under laboratory and field conditions. Our results consistently showed that the presence of red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) can increase the longevity and parasitism rate of T. atopovirilia, suggesting that providing food resources to parasitoids in cape gooseberry fields should be part of a habitat diversification strategy to control noctuid pests.