An Individual-Based Model of the Evolution of Pesticide Resistance in Heterogeneous Environments: Control of Meligethes aeneus Population in Oilseed Rape Crops
Authored by Pierre Stratonovitch, Jan Elias, Ian Denholm, Russell Slater, Mikhail A Semenov
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115631
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Research Council
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Preventing a pest population from damaging an agricultural crop and, at
the same time, preventing the development of pesticide resistance is a
major challenge in crop protection. Understanding how farming practices
and environmental factors interact with pest characteristics to
influence the spread of resistance is a difficult and complex task. It
is extremely challenging to investigate such interactions experimentally
at realistic spatial and temporal scales. Mathematical modelling and
computer simulation have, therefore, been used to analyse resistance
evolution and to evaluate potential resistance management tactics. Of
the many modelling approaches available, individual-based modelling of a
pest population offers most flexibility to include and analyse numerous
factors and their interactions. Here, a pollen beetle (Meligethes
aeneus) population was modelled as an aggregate of individual insects
inhabiting a spatially heterogeneous landscape. The development of the
pest and host crop (oilseed rape) was driven by climatic variables. The
agricultural land of the landscape was managed by farmers applying a
specific rotation and crop protection strategy. The evolution of a
single resistance allele to the pyrethroid lambda cyhalothrin was
analysed for different combinations of crop management practices and for
a recessive, intermediate and dominant resistance allele. While the
spread of a recessive resistance allele was severely constrained, intermediate or dominant resistance alleles showed a similar response to
the management regime imposed. Calendar treatments applied irrespective
of pest density accelerated the development of resistance compared to
ones applied in response to prescribed pest density thresholds. A
greater proportion of spring-sown oilseed rape was also found to
increase the speed of resistance as it increased the period of
insecticide exposure. Our study demonstrates the flexibility and power
of an individual-based model to simulate how farming practices affect
pest population dynamics, and the consequent impact of different control
strategies on the risk and speed of resistance development.
Tags
Spatial dynamics
ecology
exposure
Insecticide resistance
Fields
Wood mouse
Pest-management strategies
Pollen beetle
Brassica-napus
Heliothis-virescens