Anúncio
Anúncio

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Anúncio

biological control.pptx

  1. Approaches in Biological Control (Augmentive) • Release of large numbers of biological control agent to supplement the small numbers already present, in expectation of a greatly increased effect. Example: A beneficial wasp is naturally present but is killing only 10% of the stink bug eggs. Release of many more of the same wasp species, reared in an insectary, results in many more stink bug eggs being killed.
  2. Approaches in Biological Control (Classical /Inoculative) • Importation and release of biological control agents into an area in which they are not already present, with intent to establish a permanent population. • Example: After determining that the weevil attacks only the aquatic weed, USDA breed the weevil in a laboratory and release a few hundred at many places in the southern USA. The weevil eats the weed and reproduces, and its populations grow and spread to still other places where the weed is causing problems. After a year or two, the weed and the weevil still exist at many places, but both at low numbers, and the weed is no longer a problem
  3. Approaches in Biological Control (Inundative) • Importation and release of biological control agents into an area in which they are not already present, with intent to establish a permanent population. • Example: After determining that the weevil attacks only the aquatic weed, USDA breed the weevil in a laboratory and release a few hundred at many places in the southern USA. The weevil eats the weed and reproduces, and its populations grow and spread to still other places where the weed is causing problems. After a year or two, the weed and the weevil still exist at many places, but both at low numbers, and the weed is no longer a problem
  4. Approaches in Biological Control (Manipulative) • The manipulation of elements in the environment to enhance the numbers and/or actions of natural enemies. Example: Channels are dug in a saltmarsh to connect pools of water. This allows naturally- occurring predatory fish to gain access to pools and eat mosquito larvae. • Conservation Biological Control is a subset of this because it seeks merely to conserve. Example: Plots of a particular weed are left untreated with herbicide around a sugarcane field. This conserves the wasp population, reduces the pest (scarab) population, and reduces damage to the sugarcane.
  5. Arthropod natural enemies (Predators) • Diverse and efficient predators • Great impact on insect populations • Lack of feeding specificity • Many predators are polyphagous • Unsuitable for targeting particular pest species • Spiders and Predatory insects (Odonata, assassin bugs, robber flies, etc) • Lady Beetles, Green Lacewings, Syrphid Flies, Predatory Bugs, Ground Beetles, Mantids, Hunting Wasps, Predatory Mites
Anúncio