Author:
Delattre Thomas,Collard Blanche,Lavigne Claire
Abstract
Abstract. Biological control of pests aims at lowering population levels of pest
species by favouring natural enemies, in order to reduce the use of
pesticides. The movement behaviour of natural enemies is decisive in the
success of biological control: when low habitat quality hinders the diffusion
of natural enemies from the border, the density of natural enemies may
frequently be heterogeneous inside agricultural plots. We hypothesise that the specific relationship between habitat quality and
movement behaviour may allow the improvement of biological control by means
of a careful allocation of habitat qualities inside and around the plot. We used three tested individual-based movement models, with different levels
of complexity ranging from simple cell-to-cell movements to complex
strategies including the sinuosity of the path, boundary crossings,
perceptual range, and directional persistence. We used the models to explore
how the manipulation of habitat quality may allow significant improvements
to the residence time of natural enemies inside the field. We suggest that
existing field designs are generally inadequate to retain natural enemies.
Mechanistic explanations leading to the highest and lowest residence times
are used to draw specific management recommendations.
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
3 articles.
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