Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa

Techniques for evaluating biological control of cassava mealybug (Phenacoccusmanihoti Matile-Ferrero), mango mealybug (Rastrococcus invadens Williams), and spiralling whitefly (Aleurodicus dispersus Russell) are described. In each case, two exotic hymenopterous parasitoids were introduced. Alone or...

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Autor principal: Neuenschwander, Peter
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101023
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author Neuenschwander, Peter
author_browse Neuenschwander, Peter
author_facet Neuenschwander, Peter
author_sort Neuenschwander, Peter
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Techniques for evaluating biological control of cassava mealybug (Phenacoccusmanihoti Matile-Ferrero), mango mealybug (Rastrococcus invadens Williams), and spiralling whitefly (Aleurodicus dispersus Russell) are described. In each case, two exotic hymenopterous parasitoids were introduced. Alone or together, they brought the pests under control, while indigenous and exotic coccinelIids played a minor role. Control was achieved in large areas where the exotic parasitoid(s) had been present for more than 2-4 years. The impact was documented by (1) exclusion experiments; (2) long-term population dynamics studies; (3) laboratory and field experiments contributing to simulation models; and, most importantly, (4) quantitative results from large-scale surveys evaluated by multivariate analyses. In many countries, the main introduced parasitoid proved to be the most important factor contributing to the decline of the pest populations, recovery of plant growth and yields. Non-target species were only affected through the reduction in their food sources. The impact was scale-neutral, benefitting subsistence farmers and commercial farmers alike. The population reduction remained stable (in the order of ten times over outbreak levels). In economic terms, excluding ecological and health benefits, both the P. manihoti and R. invadens projects returned benefits to African farmers that amounted to a multiple of the research and implementation costs paid for by development agencies. Sound evaluation of the efficiency of biological control is considered to have been one of the pillars for the ultimate success of these projects.
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spelling CGSpace1010232024-08-27T10:35:55Z Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa Neuenschwander, Peter biological control phenacoccus manihoti rastrococcus invadens aleurodicus dispersus apoanagyrus gyranusoidea anagyrus encarsia impact assessment farmers cassava pests of plants plant diseases Techniques for evaluating biological control of cassava mealybug (Phenacoccusmanihoti Matile-Ferrero), mango mealybug (Rastrococcus invadens Williams), and spiralling whitefly (Aleurodicus dispersus Russell) are described. In each case, two exotic hymenopterous parasitoids were introduced. Alone or together, they brought the pests under control, while indigenous and exotic coccinelIids played a minor role. Control was achieved in large areas where the exotic parasitoid(s) had been present for more than 2-4 years. The impact was documented by (1) exclusion experiments; (2) long-term population dynamics studies; (3) laboratory and field experiments contributing to simulation models; and, most importantly, (4) quantitative results from large-scale surveys evaluated by multivariate analyses. In many countries, the main introduced parasitoid proved to be the most important factor contributing to the decline of the pest populations, recovery of plant growth and yields. Non-target species were only affected through the reduction in their food sources. The impact was scale-neutral, benefitting subsistence farmers and commercial farmers alike. The population reduction remained stable (in the order of ten times over outbreak levels). In economic terms, excluding ecological and health benefits, both the P. manihoti and R. invadens projects returned benefits to African farmers that amounted to a multiple of the research and implementation costs paid for by development agencies. Sound evaluation of the efficiency of biological control is considered to have been one of the pillars for the ultimate success of these projects. 1996-09 2019-04-24T12:29:45Z 2019-04-24T12:29:45Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101023 en Limited Access Springer Neuenschwander, P. (1996). Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three exotic homopteran pests in tropical Africa. Entomophaga, 41(3/4), 405-424.
spellingShingle biological control
phenacoccus manihoti
rastrococcus invadens
aleurodicus dispersus
apoanagyrus
gyranusoidea
anagyrus
encarsia
impact assessment
farmers
cassava
pests of plants
plant diseases
Neuenschwander, Peter
Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa
title Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa
title_full Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa
title_fullStr Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa
title_short Evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in Tropical Africa
title_sort evaluating the efficacy of biological control of three of three exotic homopteran pests in tropical africa
topic biological control
phenacoccus manihoti
rastrococcus invadens
aleurodicus dispersus
apoanagyrus
gyranusoidea
anagyrus
encarsia
impact assessment
farmers
cassava
pests of plants
plant diseases
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101023
work_keys_str_mv AT neuenschwanderpeter evaluatingtheefficacyofbiologicalcontrolofthreeofthreeexotichomopteranpestsintropicalafrica