Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T12:27:47.546Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Biodiversity and habitat modification in pest management*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 September 2011

H. F. Van Emden
Affiliation:
school of Plant Sciences, The University of Reading, Berkshire, RG6 6AS, UK
Z. T. Dabrowski
Affiliation:
The International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE), P.O. Box 30772, Nairobi Kenya
Get access

Abstract

Species diversity of animals and plants is relevant to pest management in very different ways. Plant diversity provides sources of biologically active natural products and of genes for plant resistance. Animal diversity is involved in both harmful and beneficial interactions between crops and weeds or uncultivated land and in provision of potential biological control agents. The pest management implications of changes in biological diversity therefore need to be considered at a smaller scale in the management of cropping systems and on a larger scale in development programmes and national land use planning.

Résumé

La diversité des espèces animales et végétales touche à la lutte dirigée de plusieurs façons. La diversité végétale offre des sources de produits naturels biologiquement actifs et de gènes des résistance aux plantes. La diversité animale est impliquée dans les intéractions tant nuisibles que bénéfiques entre cultures et adventices ou terres incultes, et dans la fourniture des agents potentiels de lutte biologique. Les implications de la lutte dirigée concernant des changements dans la diversité biologique par conséquent ont besoin d'être considérées à petite échelle au niveau de la gestion des systèmes culturales et à une plus grande échelle au niveau des programmes de développement et de planification nationale de l'utilisation des terres.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © ICIPE 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Altieri, M. A., van Schoonhoven, A. and Doll, J. D. (1978) A review of insect prevalence in maize (Zea mays L.) and bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) in polycultural systems. Field Crops Res. 1, 3349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amoako-Atta, B., Omolo, E. O. and Kidega, E. K. (1983) Influence of maize, cowpea and sorghum intercropping systems on stem-/pod-borer infestations. Insect Sci. Applic. 4, 4758.Google Scholar
Arthur, D. R. (1945) The development of artificially introduced infestations of Aphidius granarius Marsh., under field conditions. Bull, entomol. Res. 36, 291295.Google Scholar
Bach, C. (1979) Effect of plant density and diversity on the population dynamics of the striped cucumber beetle, Acalymma vittata. Ph.D. Thesis. University of Michigan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Batten, M. (1983) The rush is on to study jungles. Int. Wild life 13(3), 1619.Google Scholar
Bock, K. R. (1982) Geminivirus diseases of tropical crops. Pl. Disease 66, 266270.Google Scholar
Burn, A. J. (1988a) Assessment of the impact of pesticides on invertebrate predation in cereal crops. Aspects Appl. Biol. 17, 279288.Google Scholar
Burn, A. J. (1988b) Effects of scale on the measurement of pesticide effects on invertebrate predators and parasites. In Field Methods for the Study of Environmental Effects of Pesticides (Edited by Greaves, M. P., Greig-Smith, P. W. and Smith, B. D.), BCPC Monograph no. 40, BCPC, Thornton Heath, pp. 109117.Google Scholar
Cameron, P. J., Powell, W. and Loxdale, H. D. (1984) Reservoirs for Aphidius ervi Haliday (Hymenoptera: Aphidiidae), a polyphagous parasitoid of cereal aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae). Bull. entomol. Res. 74, 647656.Google Scholar
Chambers, R. J., Sunderland, K. D., Stacey, P. L. and Wyatt, I. J. (1982) A survey of cereal aphids and their natural enemies in winter wheat in 1980. Ann. Appl. Biol. 101, 175178.Google Scholar
Chiverton, P. A. and Sotherton, N. W. (1991) The effects on beneficial arthropods of the exclusion of herbicides from cereal crop edges. J. Appl. Ecol. 28, 10271038.Google Scholar
Coaker, T. H. (1987) Cultural methods: The crop. In Integrated Pest Management (Edited by Burn, A. J., Coaker, T. H. and Jepson, P. C.), pp. 6988. Academic Press, London.Google Scholar
Coaker, T. H. and Finch, S. (1973) The association of the cabbage rootfly with its food and host plants. In Insect/Plant Relationships (Edited by van Emden, H. F.), pp. 119128. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford.Google Scholar
Coombes, D. S. and Sotherton, N. W. (1986) The dispersal and distribution of polyphagous predatory Coleoptera in cereals. Ann. Appl. Biol. 108, 461474.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowgill, S. E., Wratten, S. and Sotherton, N. W. (1993) The selective use of floral resources by the hoverfly Episyrphus balteatus (Diptera: Syrphidae) on farmland. Ann. Appl. Biol. 122, 223231.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Bach, P. (1964) Biological Control of Insect Pests and Weeds. Chapman and Hall, London.Google Scholar
Dempster, J.P. (1969) Some effects of weed control on the numbers of the small cabbage white fly (Pieris rapae L.) on Brussels sprouts. J. Appl. Ecol. 6, 339345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doutt, R. L. and Nakata, J. (1973) The Rubus leafhopper and its egg parasitoid: An endemic biotic system useful in grape-pest management. Environ. Entomol. 2, 381386.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eastop, V. F. (1981) The wild hosts of aphid pests. In Pests, Pathogens and Vegetation (Edited by Thresh, J. M.), pp. 285298. Pitman, London.Google Scholar
Edwards, C. A. (1968) Effects of direct drilling on the soil flora. Outlook on Agric. 8, 243244.Google Scholar
Elton, C. S. (1958) The Ecology of Invasions by Animals and Plants. Methuen, London.Google Scholar
Gallun, R. L. and Khush, G. S. (1980) Genetic factors affecting the expression and stability of resistance. In Breeding Plants Resistant to Insects (Edited by Maxwell, F. G. and Jennings, P. R.), pp. 6386. John Wiley, Chichester.Google Scholar
Goldsmith, E., Allen, R., Allaby, M., Davoll, J. and Lawrence, S. (1972) A blueprint for survival. Introduction: The need for change. Ecologist 2, 27.Google Scholar
Hairston, N. G., Allan, J. D., Colwell, R. K., Futuyma, D. J., Howell, J., Lubin, M. D., Mathias, J. and Vandermeer, J. H. (1968) The relationship between species diversity and stability: An experimental approach with protozoa and bacteria. Ecology 49, 10911101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawksworth, D. L. (1968) Man's impact on the British flora and fauna. Outlook on Agric. 8, 2328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodek, I. (1967) Bionomics and ecology of predaceous Coccinellidae. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 12, 79104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooper, M. D. (1984) What are the main recent impacts of agriculture on wildlife? Could they have been predicted, and what can be predicted for the future? In Agriculture and the Environment (Edited by Jenkins, D.), pp. 3336. Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hurd, L. E., Mellinger, M. V., Wolf, L. L. and McNaughton, S. J. (1971) Stability and diversity at three trophic levels in terrestrial successional ecosystems. Science 173, 11344136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jacobson, L. A. (1946) The effect of Say stinkbug on wheat. Can. Entomol. 77, 200.Google Scholar
Jones, M. G. (1942) The summer hosts of Aphis fabae Scop. Bull. entomol. Res. 33, 161169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judd, G. J. R. and Borden, J. H. (1988) Long-range host-finding behaviour of the onion fly Delia antiqua (Diptera: Anthomyiidae): Ecological and physiological constraints. J. Appl. Ecol. 25, 829845.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kalashnikov, K. Y. (1940) A study upon pests and diseases of agricultural plants in the extreme North [in Russian]. In Summary of the Scientific Research Work of the Institute of Plant Protection for the Year 1939, pp. 4952. Leningrad Academy of Agricultural Science, Leningrad.Google Scholar
Kanervo, V. (1947) Über das Massenauftreten der Gammaeule Phytometra gamma L. (Lep. Noctuidae), im Sommer 1946 in Finnland. Ann. Entomol. Fenn. 13, 89104.Google Scholar
Khush, G. S. (1980) Breeding for multiple disease and insect resistance in rice. In Biology and Breeding for Resistance to Arthropods and Pathogens in Agricultural Plants: Proceedings of an International Short Course in Host Plant Resistance, 22 July–4 August 1979 (Edited by Harris, M. K.), pp. 341354. Texas A and M University, Texas.Google Scholar
Kopvillem, H. G. (1960) Nectar plants for the attraction of entomophagous insects [in Russian]. Zash. Rast. Vred. Bolez. 5, 3334.Google Scholar
Kricher, J. C. (1973) Summer bird species diversity in relation to secondary succession in the New Jersey Piedmont. Amer. Midl. Nat. 89, 121137.Google Scholar
Lewis, T. (1965a) The effects of shelter on the distribution of insect pests. Sci. Hort. 17, 7484.Google Scholar
Lewis, T. (1965b) The effect of an artificial windbreak on the distribution of aphids in a lettuce crop. Ann. Appl. Biol. 55, 513518.Google Scholar
Lewis, T. (1965c) The effects of an artificial windbreak on the aerial distribution of flying insects. Ann. Appl. Biol. 55, 503512.Google Scholar
MacArthur, R. (1955) Fluctuations of animal populations, and a measure of community stability. Ecology 36, 533536.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackauer, M. and Way, M. J. (1976) Myzus persicae Sulz. an aphid of world importance. In Studies in Biological Control (Edited by Delucchi, V. L.), pp. 51119. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
McKinlay, R. G. (1985) Effect of undersowing potatoes with grass on potato aphid numbers. Ann. Appl. Biol. 106, 2329.Google Scholar
Minja, E. M. (1990) Management of Chilo spp. infesting cereals in Eastern Africa. Insect Sci. Applic. 11, 489499.Google Scholar
Murdoch, W. W., Evans, F. C. and Peterson, C. H. (1972) Diversity and patterns in plants and insects. Ecology 53, 819829.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neuenschwander, P., Hammond, W. N. O., Gutierrez, A. P., Cudjoe, A. R., Adjakloe, R., Baumgartner, J. U. and Rogev, U. (1989) Impact assessment of the biological control of the cassava mealybug, Phenacoccus manihoti Matile-Ferrero (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae), by the introduced parasitoid Epidinocarsis lopezi (De Santis) (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae). Bull. entomol. Res. 79, 579594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Donnell, M. S. and Coaker, T. H. (1975) Potential of intra-crop diversity in the control of brassica pests. Prot. 8th Br. Insectic. Fungic. Conf., Brighton 1975, 101105.Google Scholar
Ogwaro, K. (1983) Intensity levels of stem-borers in maize and sorghum and the effect on yield under different intercropping patterns. Insect Sci. Applic. 4, 3338.Google Scholar
Omolo, E. O. and Seshu Reddy, K. V. (1985) Effects of different sorghum-based cropping systems on insect pests in Kenya. Proc. Int. Sorghum Entomol. Workshop, pp. 395401. ICRISAT, Patancheru, India.Google Scholar
Pimentel, D. (1961) Species diversity and insect population outbreaks. Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am. 54, 7686.Google Scholar
Pollard, E. (1967) Studies on the invertebrate fauna of hedges. Ph. D. Thesis. University of Reading, UK.Google Scholar
Pollard, E. (1968a) Hedges II. The effect of removal of the bottom flora of a hawthorn hedgerow on the fauna of the hawthorn. J. Appl. Ecol. 5, 109123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pollard, E. (1968b) Hedges III. The effect of removal of the bottom flora of a hawthorn hedgerow on the Carabidae of the hedge bottom. J. Appl. Ecol. 5, 125139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pollard, E. (1971) Hedges VI. Habitat diversity and crop pests: A study of Brevicoryne brassicae and its syrphid predators. J. Appl. Ecol. 8, 751780.Google Scholar
Powell, W. (1983) The role of parasitoids in limiting cereal aphid populations. In Aphid Antagonists (Edited by Cavalloro, R.), pp. 5056. Balkema, Rotterdam.Google Scholar
Powell, W. (1986) Enhancing parasite activity in crops. In Insect Parasitoids (Edited by Waage, J. and Greathead, D.), pp. 319340. Academic Press, London.Google Scholar
Powell, W., Dean, J. G., Dewar, A. and Wilding, N. (1981) Towards integrated control of cereal aphids. Proc. Br. Crop Prot. Conf., Brighton 1981, 201206.Google Scholar
Reed, W. (1965) Heliothisarmigera (Hb.) (Noctuidae) in western Tanganyika II. Ecology and natural and chemical control. Bull, entomol. Res. 56, 127140.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F. (1984) Global patterns of land conversions. Environment 26(9), 613, 34–38.Google Scholar
Risen, S. J. (1980) The population dynamics of several herbivorous beetles in a tropical agroecosystem: The effect of intercroppping corn, beans and squash in Costa Rica. J. Appl. Ecol. 17, 593612.Google Scholar
Risch, S. J., Andrew, D. and Altieri, M. A. (1983) Agroecosystem diversity and pest control data, tentative conclusions and new research directions. Environ. Entomol. 12, 625629.Google Scholar
Root, R. B. (1973) Organisation of a plant-arthropod association in simple and diverse habitats: The fauna of collards (Brassica oleracea). Ecol. Monogr. 43, 94125.Google Scholar
Ryan, J., Ryan, M. F. and McNaeidhe, F. (1980) The effect of interrow plant cover on populations of cabbage root fly, Delia brassicae (Wied.). J. Appl. Ecol. 17, 3140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sattauer, O. (1989) Genes on deposit: Saving for the future. New Scientist 123, 3741.Google Scholar
Schilder, F. A. and Schilder, M. (1928) Die Nahrung der Coccinelliden und ihre Beziehung zur Verwandtschaft der Arten. Arb. Biol. Reichsanst. Land- u. Forstw. Berlin 16, 215282.Google Scholar
Schneider-Orelli, O. (1945) Bienenweide und Schädlingsbekämpfung. Schweiz. Bienenz. 9, 423429.Google Scholar
Shibang, Q. (1983) Biological control of insect pests with indigenous natural enemies in the People's Republic of China. Abstracts of 10th Int. Congr. Plant Prot. 2, 777 (5A-R5).Google Scholar
Simmonds, F. J. (1968) Economics of biological control. PANS 14, 207215.Google Scholar
Simmonds, M. S. J., Evans, H. C. and Blaney, W. M. (1992) Pesticides for the year 2000: Mycochemicals and botanicals. In Pest Management and the Environment in 2000 (Edited by Kadir, A. A. A. S. and Barlow, H. S.), pp. 127164. CABI, Wallingford.Google Scholar
Simmonds, N. W. (1979) Principles of Crop Improvement. Longman, London.Google Scholar
Smith, J. G. (1976a) Influence of crop background on aphids and other phytophagous insects on Brussels sprouts. Ann. Appl. Biol. 83, 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, J. G. (1976b) Influence of crop background on natural enemies of aphids on Brussels sprouts. Ann. Appl. Biol. 83, 1529.Google Scholar
Sotherton, N. W. (1984) The distribution and abundance of predatory arthropods overwintering in farmland. Ann. Appl. Biol. 105, 423429.Google Scholar
Sotherton, N. W., Boatman, N. D. and Rands, M. R. W. (1989) The ‘Conservation Headland’ experiment in cereal ecosystems. Entomologist 108, 135143.Google Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1962) Migration: An evolutionary necessity for denizensof temporary habitats. Proc. 11th Int. Congr. Entomol., Vienna, 1960 3, 5458.Google Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1975) The dynamics of insect populations. In Insects, Science and Society (Edited by Pimentel, D.), pp. 151199. Academic Press, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. and Way, M. J. (1970) Ecological background to pest management. In Concepts of Pest Management (Edited by Rabb, R. L. and Guthrie, F. E.), pp. 629. North Carolina State University, Raleigh.Google Scholar
Spencer, H. (1987) First Principles. Appleton, New York.Google Scholar
Staŕy, P. (1983) The perennial stinging nettle (Urtica dioica) as a reservoir of aphid parasites (Hymenoptera, Aphidiidae). Acta Entomol. Bohemoslov. 80, 8186.Google Scholar
Theunissen, J. and den Ouden, H. (1980) Effects of intercropping with Spergula arvensis on pests of Brussels sprouts. Entomol. Exp. Appl. 27, 260268.Google Scholar
Thorpe, W. H. and Caudle, H. B. (1938) Astudy of the olfactory responses of insect parasites to the food plant of their host. Parasitology 30, 523528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thresh, J. M. (1981) The role of weeds and wild plants in the epidemiology of plant virus diseases. In Pests, Pathogens and Vegetation (Edited by Thresh, J. M.), pp. 5370. Pitman, London.Google Scholar
Tischler, W. (1950) Überwinterangsverhältnisse der landwirtschaftlichen Schädlinge. Z. Angew. Entomol. 32, 184194.Google Scholar
Tukahirwa, E. M. and Coaker, T. H. (1982) Effects of mixed cropping on some insect pests of brassicas: Reduced Brevicoryne brassicae infestations and influences on epigeal predators and the disturbance of ovipositional behaviour in Delia brassicae. Entomol. Exp. Appl. 32, 129140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
United Nations Environment Programme (1992) Convention on Biological Diversity, 5 June 1992, Mimeograph No. 92–7807. UNEP, Geneva.Google Scholar
Vago, C. and Gayrol, R. (1955) Une virose à polyèdres de la gamma Plusia gamma L. (Lepidoptera). Ann. Epiphyt. 6, 421432.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. (1963a) A preliminary study of insect numbers in field and hedgerow. Entomol. Month. Mag. 98 (1962), 255259.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. (1963b) Observations on the effect of flowers on the activity of parasitic Hymenoptera. Entomol. Month. Mag. 98 (1962), 265270.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. (1965a) The role of uncultivated land in the biology of crop pests and beneficial insects. Sci. Hort. 7, 121136.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. (1965b) The effect of uncultivated land on the distribution of cabbage aphid (Brevicoryne brassicae) on an adjacent crop. J. Appl.Ecol. 2, 171196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Emden, H. F. (1981) Wild plants in the ecology of insect pests. In Pests, Pathogens and Vegetation (Edited by Thresh, J. M.), pp. 251261. Pitman, London.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. (1989) Plant diversity and natural enemy efficiency in agro-ecosystems. In Critical Issues in Biological Control (Edited by Mackauer, M., Ehler, L. E. and Roland, J.), pp. 6380. Intercept, Andover.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. and Way, M. J. (1973) Host plants in the population dynamics of insects. In Insect/Plant Relationships (Edited by van Emden, H. F.), pp. 181199. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford.Google Scholar
van Emden, H. F. and Williams, G. (1974) Insect stability and diversity in agro-ecosystems. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 19, 455475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vickerman, G. P. (1974) Some effects of grass weed control on the arthropod fauna of cereals. Proc. 12th Br. Weed Contr. Conf., Brighton 1974, 929939.Google Scholar
Watt, K. E. F. (1965) Community stability and the strategy of biological control. Can. Entomol. 97, 887895.Google Scholar
Way, M. J., Cammell, M. E., Alford, D. V., Gould, H. J., Graham, C. W., Lane, A., Light, W. I. G. Sr, Rayner, J. M., Hathcoste, G. D., Fletcher, K. E. and Seal, K. (1977) Use of forecasting in chemical control of black bean aphid, Aphis fabae Scop. on spring-sown field beans. Pl. Path. 26, 17.Google Scholar
Williams, C. B. (1964) Patterns in the Balance of Nature. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Wolcott, G. N. (1942) The requirements of parasites for more than hosts. Science 96, 317318.Google Scholar
Wratten, S. D., van Emden, H. F. and Thomas, M. B. (1996) Within-field and border refugia for the enhancement of natural enemies. In Enhancing Biological Control of Arthropod Pests through Habitat Management (Edited by Pickett, C. and Bugg, R. L.). AG Access Corporation, California (in press).Google Scholar
Young, M. T. and Garrison, G. L. (1949) Aphid collections at Tallulah, Louisiana, from 1941 to 1947. J. econ. Entomol. 42, 993994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar