Landscape structure and composition affect aphid biological control in alfalfa fields, but regional differences prevailExport / Share PlumX View Altmetrics View AltmetricsZhang, X., Dong, Z., Wu, Q., Gagic, V., Tomanovic, Z., Zalucki, M. P. and Lu, Z. (2024) Landscape structure and composition affect aphid biological control in alfalfa fields, but regional differences prevail. Entomologia Generalis, 44 (3). pp. 535-544.
Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1127/entomologia/2023/2320 AbstractUnderstanding how landscape composition and configuration drive the dynamics of pests and their various natural enemies is crucial to enhance biological control services (biocontrol). Geographic variability in landscape effects prompts questions about whether this is due to genuine differences or methodological differences among studies, given that most studies are conducted in a single region. This study investigated how the ecological function of parasitoids and predators responds to landscape traits in three regions encompassing an agriculture intensification gradient. The effects of landscape structure and configuration differed among regions and natural enemies. Non-crop habitats increased the abundance of parasitoids only in two less intensified regions presumably due to insufficient amount of non-crop habitats in the intensified region (typically < 10%). Nevertheless, their biological control efficiency (BCE) was consistently increased by non-crop habitats across regions. Higher maize proportion increased predator abundance and their BCE in the two non-mountainous regions. The value of maize as a source habitat for predators may have been limited in the mountainous region due to the lower aphid abundances there. Edge density positively affected abundances of predators and parasitoids, but only positively increased the BCE of all natural enemies combined. Inconsistent regional responses to the same landscape variables suggest that a uniform integrated pest management strategy for alfalfa is impractical. However, increasing edge density should be a useful first step for supporting diverse natural enemy communities and their biocontrol potential. © 2024 The authors.
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