Give predators a complement: conserving natural enemy biodiversity to improve biocontrol

Publication date: Available online 27 April 2019Source: Biological ControlAuthor(s): William E. SnyderAbstractNatural enemy biodiversity reflects both the number of species attacking pests (species richness) and their relative abundances (species evenness). Recent experimental work suggests that greater enemy biodiversity might lead to stronger pest suppression when natural enemies occupy different, complementary feeding niches. Complementarity can arise from natural enemy species attacking different pest species or stages located in different places or at different times, and/or when enemies use different hunting strategies. However, these benefits can be weakened when predators in diverse predator communities kill one another, which is more likely in simple foraging environments including few prey species. Here, I review our growing understanding of natural enemy biodiversity in agroecosystems while suggesting a range of approaches that conservation biological control (CBC) practitioners might deploy to specifically encourage complementarity and dampen interference. For example, mixing different crop species or allowing crop residue to remain in fields increases prey diversity and the complexity of the foraging environment, both of which are likely to increase partitioning of diet- and spatial-niches among natural enemy species, making intraguild predation less likely. Habitat management alongside fields likewise might be designed to include elements attractive to different...
Source: Biological Control - Category: Biology Source Type: research