Several natural enemies regulate populations of root maggots ( Delia spp.) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae) in canola ( Brassica napus L.) in western Canada, among them the rove beetles Aleochara bilineata Gyllenhal and Aleochara verna Say (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) and the hymenopteran Trybliographa rapae Westwood (Hymenoptera: Figitidae). Intercrops of canola and wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) can be part of an integrated pest management strategy to reduce damage by Delia spp. to canola. We investigated several intercropping regimes of canola and wheat to determine effects on parasitism of Delia radicum (L.) and activity densities of adult A. bilineata and A. verna. Studies were conducted over four site-years in central Alberta, Canada in 2005 and 2006. Mean parasitism rates of D. radicum puparia by A. bilineata ranged from 7.27% to 81.69%. Increasing proportions of wheat in intercrops significantly reduced parasitism by A. bilineata in one site-year. Parasitism of D. radicum by T. rapae was not affected by intercropping; mean parasitism rates were between 2.17% and 14.55%. In one site-year combined parasitism by all parasitoids significantly increased with increasing canola as a proportion of total crop plant populations. Pitfall trap collections of adult A. bilineata increased with increasing proportions of canola in some site-years. Collections of A. verna adults were low relative to A. bilineata and were largely unaffected by intercropping. Although canola-wheat intercrops do not appear to favour parasitism of D. radicum, reductions in canola root damage by Delia larvae in intercrops, reported previously, suggest that canola-wheat intercrops may nevertheless be favourable as a crop protection strategy.