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Continental-scale suppression of an invasive pest by a host-specific parasitoid heralds a new era for arthropod biological control

Authors :
Leo Kris Palao
Matthew J.W. Cock
George E. Heimpel
Anchana Thancharoen
P. Neuenschwander
Georg Goergen
Kris A.G. Wyckhuys
Teja Tscharntke
Vi Le Xuan
Nhung T.T. Le
Glenn Hyman
Muhammad Zainal Fanani
Dharani Dhar Burra
Johannes W. Ketelaar
Liem V. Nguyen
Jonathan G. Lundgren
Geoff M. Gurr
Yanhui Lu
Steve D. Wratten
Aunu Rauf
Minsheng You
Ignazio Graziosi
Prapit Wongtiem
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
PeerJ, 2018.

Abstract

Biological control constitutes one of the world’s prime ecosystems services, and can provide long-term and broad-scale suppression of invasive pests, weeds and pathogens in both natural and agricultural environments. Following (very few) widely-documented historic cases that led to sizeable environmental up-sets, the discipline of insect biological control has -over the past three decades- gone through much-needed reform. Now, by deliberately taking into account the ecological risks associated with insect biological control, immense environmental and societal benefits can be gained. In this study, we document and analyze a rare, successful case of biological control against the invasive mealybug, Phenacoccus manihoti (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) which invaded Southeast Asia in 2008, where it caused substantial crop losses and triggered 2- to 3-fold surges in agricultural commodity prices. In 2009, the host-specific parasitoid Anagyrus lopezi (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae) was released in Thailand and subsequently introduced into neighboring Asian countries. Drawing upon continental-scale insect surveys, multi-year population studies and (field-level) experimental assays, we show how A. lopezi attained intermediate to high parasitism rates across diverse agro-ecological contexts. Driving mealybug populations below non-damaging levels at a continental scale, A. lopezi allowed yield recoveries up to 10.0 t/ha and provided biological control services worth several hundred dollars per ha (at local farm-gate prices) in Asia’s 4-million ha cassava crop. Our work provides lessons to invasion science and crop protection worldwide, heralds a new era for insect biological control, and highlights its potentially large socio-economic benefits to agricultural sustainability in the face of a debilitating invasive pest. In times of unrelenting insect invasions, surging pesticide use and accelerating (invertebrate) biodiversity loss across the globe, this study unequivocally demonstrates how biological control – as a pure public good – constitutes a powerful, cost-effective and environmentally-responsible solution for invasive species mitigation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6fa823728e611756758d9bc5ba33accf