Modelling the effects of plant species on biocontrol effectiveness in ornamental nursery crops
Authored by DJ Skirvin, MED Williams, JS Fenlon, KD Sunderland
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2664.2002.00728.x
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs
Platforms:
Fortran
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. The development of biological control strategies for ornamental crops
is challenging due to the high diversity of crops grown and zero
tolerance to pest presence. In an attempt to provide a biological basis
for the development of biological control, an individual-based
stochastic modelling approach was developed.
2. This approach has been used to examine the impact of tritrophic
interactions on biological control of the spider mite Tetranychus
urticae by the predatory mite Phytoseiulus persimilis. The effect of
differences in the biology of T urticae and P persimilis on three
nursery stock crops, Ceanothus thyrsiflorus var. `Autumnal Blue', Choisya ternata and Euonymus japonicus, was investigated through
simulation experiments.
3. The effect of pest aggregation and frequency of predator introduction
on the control of T urticae was examined at a range of initial pest and
predator densities. Control was assumed to occur when T urticae was
driven to extinction, due to zero tolerance to pest presence on these
ornamental crops.
4. `One-off `introductions of P persimilis rarely caused T urticae to
become extinct, but repeated weekly introductions always led to pest
extinction, regardless of the plant species, at the highest introduction
rate of 1000 predators (10 stem(-1)). Time to pest extinction was
similar on all plant species with repeated introductions, but was
influenced by differences in the biology of pest and predator on the
three plant species.
5. Increased aggregation of T. urticae led to greater extinction at
lower predator introduction rates, but time to extinction was increased
due to the time taken for the predator to cope with the increased pest
density.
6. These predictions highlight the importance of plant species and
spatial dynamics of both pest and predator in determining the efficiency
with which biological control can be achieved on ornamental crops, suggesting that prophylactic application of predatory mites may be
preferable to reactive application.
Tags
Dispersal
spatial processes
Predator
Simulation-model
Responses
Prey metapopulation system
Phytoseiulus-persimilis acarina
2-spotted
spider-mite
Tetranychus-urticae
Interactive system