From IBM to IPM: Using individual-based models to design the spatial arrangement of traps and crops in integrated pest management strategies
Authored by Fabrice Vinatier, Philippe Tixier, Pierre-Francois Duyck, Francoise Lescourret
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2011.10.005
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Abstract
The development of alternative pest-control strategies based on the
spatial design of cropping systems requires a thorough understanding of
the spatial links between the pest and its environment. Mechanistic
models, especially individual-based models (IBMs), are powerful tools
for integrating key behaviours, such as habitat selection and dispersal, with spatial heterogeneity. In this paper, we used an IBM calibrated and
evaluated from real data to represent the spatial dynamics of the banana
weevil in relation to the cropping system. We considered crop
fragmentation and mass trapping as tools for suppressing pest numbers.
Our simulation results showed that manipulating crop residues in the
area surrounding each pheromone trap greatly improved trap efficiency.
For an intensive banana plantation in fallow, traps were most effective
when situated at the transition zone between banana area and fallow so
as to maximize the trapping of weevils escaping the fallow. The model
also showed that weevil numbers decreased when fragmentation of banana
plantations was reduced. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
pheromone traps
Fragmentation
Population-dynamics
Beetles
Behavioral ecology
Conservation biological-control
Cosmopolites-sordidus
Banana weevil
Attraction
radius