Seasonal distribution patterns of the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae), and its principal parasitoids Diadegma insulare (Cresson) (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) and Microplitis plutellae (Muesebeck) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) were investigated over three site-years in commercial fields of canola (Brassica napus L.) in southern Alberta, Canada. The sampling of P. xylostella, D. insulare, and M. plutellae from points arranged in grid patterns, together with the mapping and analysis of their spatial distributions over time, generated a detailed picture of the pattern of crop infestation by the herbivore and its parasitoids. Plutella xylostella exhibited significant aggregations on different scales most often when its host plants were in early flowering. Diadegma insulare adults exhibited significant aggregated distributions during early flowering and distributions subsequently became more uniform as the wasps moved into the crop later in the season. However, M. plutellae distributions were aggregated in mid flowering in only one site-year. The close spatial associations between densities of D. insulare and P. xylostella indicated that host abundance was the main determinant of parasitoid distribution patterns. Spatial distributions of nutrient contents in leaf tissue and their spatial associations with the herbivore and parasitoids were also investigated. Significant spatial associations existed between certain nutrients (e.g. nitrogen, sulfur, and potassium) and P. xylostella distributions. Sulfur exhibited a positive effect on the distributions of D. insulare but not of M. plutellae. We observed similar relationships between nutrients and the distribution of P. xylostella parasitoids as for nutrients and P. xylostella, but these relationships lacked consistency and may be the results of the spatial associations between the parasitoids and their hosts. Aggregated distributions of adults and larvae of P. xylostella hold promise for spatially targeted insecticidal applications as a means for reducing the environmental impact of insecticides on nontarget and beneficial species in canola agroecosystems.