Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context

Semi-natural habitats (SNH) are considered essential for pest-suppressive landscapes, but their influence on crop pests and natural enemies can be highly variable. Instead of SNH per se, the availability of resources, such as pollen and nectar, may be more relevant for supporting pest control. Here, we assessed the spatiotemporal variation of multiple insect pests (cereal leaf beetles and aphids) and natural enemies (predators and aphid parasitoids) in wheat fields and their responses to landscape context and flower availability. We combined detailed information on pollen use by natural enemies with the specific distribution of pollen-providing plants across a gradient of landscape composition and configuration. The abundance of wheat pests was tightly linked to wheat development stage. Syrphids colonised the fields early in the season, while the abundance of other enemies increased later in the season. The responses of pests to landscape structure were variable and, while some pests had low abundances in landscapes with high edge density and SNH cover, Sitobion avenae abundance was positively associated with SNH cover. Lacewings, syrphids and cereal leaf beetles were abundant in landscapes with diverse and abundant flower resources, whereas the abundance of parasitoids and Nabis sp. was driven by aphid abundance. We detected no significant indirect effects of landscape on pests via natural enemies. Synthesis and applications. Our findings highlight the need for conservation biological control to go beyond ‘one size fits all’ and consider the specific ecology of the involved organisms, even for a single crop type. Landscapes with high edge density and flowering woody plants may support natural enemies, in particular syrphids, which colonised the fields early in the season. Incentives for pest-suppressive landscapes should focus on tailored strategies that disfavour dominant cereal pests and simultaneously enhance natural enemies according to their ecological requirements.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: González, Ezequiel, Bianchi, Felix Jan Joost Antoine, Eckerter, Philipp W., Pfaff, Verena, Weiler, Sarah, Entling, Martin H.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:aphids, cereal leaf beetles, flower resources, parasitoids, pest-suppressive landscapes, predators, semi-natural habitats,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/ecological-requirements-drive-the-variable-responses-of-wheat-pes
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5891072024-12-04 González, Ezequiel Bianchi, Felix Jan Joost Antoine Eckerter, Philipp W. Pfaff, Verena Weiler, Sarah Entling, Martin H. Article/Letter to editor Journal of Applied Ecology 59 (2022) 2 ISSN: 0021-8901 Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context 2022 Semi-natural habitats (SNH) are considered essential for pest-suppressive landscapes, but their influence on crop pests and natural enemies can be highly variable. Instead of SNH per se, the availability of resources, such as pollen and nectar, may be more relevant for supporting pest control. Here, we assessed the spatiotemporal variation of multiple insect pests (cereal leaf beetles and aphids) and natural enemies (predators and aphid parasitoids) in wheat fields and their responses to landscape context and flower availability. We combined detailed information on pollen use by natural enemies with the specific distribution of pollen-providing plants across a gradient of landscape composition and configuration. The abundance of wheat pests was tightly linked to wheat development stage. Syrphids colonised the fields early in the season, while the abundance of other enemies increased later in the season. The responses of pests to landscape structure were variable and, while some pests had low abundances in landscapes with high edge density and SNH cover, Sitobion avenae abundance was positively associated with SNH cover. Lacewings, syrphids and cereal leaf beetles were abundant in landscapes with diverse and abundant flower resources, whereas the abundance of parasitoids and Nabis sp. was driven by aphid abundance. We detected no significant indirect effects of landscape on pests via natural enemies. Synthesis and applications. Our findings highlight the need for conservation biological control to go beyond ‘one size fits all’ and consider the specific ecology of the involved organisms, even for a single crop type. Landscapes with high edge density and flowering woody plants may support natural enemies, in particular syrphids, which colonised the fields early in the season. Incentives for pest-suppressive landscapes should focus on tailored strategies that disfavour dominant cereal pests and simultaneously enhance natural enemies according to their ecological requirements. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/ecological-requirements-drive-the-variable-responses-of-wheat-pes 10.1111/1365-2664.14062 https://edepot.wur.nl/556834 aphids cereal leaf beetles flower resources parasitoids pest-suppressive landscapes predators semi-natural habitats https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic aphids
cereal leaf beetles
flower resources
parasitoids
pest-suppressive landscapes
predators
semi-natural habitats
aphids
cereal leaf beetles
flower resources
parasitoids
pest-suppressive landscapes
predators
semi-natural habitats
spellingShingle aphids
cereal leaf beetles
flower resources
parasitoids
pest-suppressive landscapes
predators
semi-natural habitats
aphids
cereal leaf beetles
flower resources
parasitoids
pest-suppressive landscapes
predators
semi-natural habitats
González, Ezequiel
Bianchi, Felix Jan Joost Antoine
Eckerter, Philipp W.
Pfaff, Verena
Weiler, Sarah
Entling, Martin H.
Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
description Semi-natural habitats (SNH) are considered essential for pest-suppressive landscapes, but their influence on crop pests and natural enemies can be highly variable. Instead of SNH per se, the availability of resources, such as pollen and nectar, may be more relevant for supporting pest control. Here, we assessed the spatiotemporal variation of multiple insect pests (cereal leaf beetles and aphids) and natural enemies (predators and aphid parasitoids) in wheat fields and their responses to landscape context and flower availability. We combined detailed information on pollen use by natural enemies with the specific distribution of pollen-providing plants across a gradient of landscape composition and configuration. The abundance of wheat pests was tightly linked to wheat development stage. Syrphids colonised the fields early in the season, while the abundance of other enemies increased later in the season. The responses of pests to landscape structure were variable and, while some pests had low abundances in landscapes with high edge density and SNH cover, Sitobion avenae abundance was positively associated with SNH cover. Lacewings, syrphids and cereal leaf beetles were abundant in landscapes with diverse and abundant flower resources, whereas the abundance of parasitoids and Nabis sp. was driven by aphid abundance. We detected no significant indirect effects of landscape on pests via natural enemies. Synthesis and applications. Our findings highlight the need for conservation biological control to go beyond ‘one size fits all’ and consider the specific ecology of the involved organisms, even for a single crop type. Landscapes with high edge density and flowering woody plants may support natural enemies, in particular syrphids, which colonised the fields early in the season. Incentives for pest-suppressive landscapes should focus on tailored strategies that disfavour dominant cereal pests and simultaneously enhance natural enemies according to their ecological requirements.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet aphids
cereal leaf beetles
flower resources
parasitoids
pest-suppressive landscapes
predators
semi-natural habitats
author González, Ezequiel
Bianchi, Felix Jan Joost Antoine
Eckerter, Philipp W.
Pfaff, Verena
Weiler, Sarah
Entling, Martin H.
author_facet González, Ezequiel
Bianchi, Felix Jan Joost Antoine
Eckerter, Philipp W.
Pfaff, Verena
Weiler, Sarah
Entling, Martin H.
author_sort González, Ezequiel
title Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
title_short Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
title_full Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
title_fullStr Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
title_full_unstemmed Ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
title_sort ecological requirements drive the variable responses of wheat pests and natural enemies to the landscape context
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/ecological-requirements-drive-the-variable-responses-of-wheat-pes
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AT weilersarah ecologicalrequirementsdrivethevariableresponsesofwheatpestsandnaturalenemiestothelandscapecontext
AT entlingmartinh ecologicalrequirementsdrivethevariableresponsesofwheatpestsandnaturalenemiestothelandscapecontext
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