Multi-scale effects of landscape complexity and crop management on pollen beetle parasitism rate

被引:0
|
作者
Adrien Rusch
Muriel Valantin-Morison
Jean-Pierre Sarthou
Jean Roger-Estrade
机构
[1] INRA (French National Institute for Agricultural Research),
[2] UMR211 Agronomie,undefined
[3] INRA/AgroParisTech,undefined
[4] University of Toulouse,undefined
[5] INPT-ENSAT,undefined
[6] UMR 1201 DYNAFOR,undefined
[7] AgroParisTech,undefined
[8] UMR 211 Agronomie,undefined
[9] INRA/AgroParisTech,undefined
来源
Landscape Ecology | 2011年 / 26卷
关键词
Biological control; Parasitoid; Spatial scale; Landscape; Pest management; Multimodel inference; Movement behaviour; Soil tillage;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Improving our understanding about how natural enemies respond to semi-natural habitats and crop management scattered in the landscape may contribute to the development of ecologically based pest management strategies maximising biological control services. We investigated how soil tillage and semi-natural habitats influenced the parasitism rates of pollen beetle (Meligethes aeneus F.) larvae at 8 different spatial scales (from 250 to 2000 m radius circular sectors) in 42 oilseed rape (OSR) fields. We used multimodel inference approaches to identify and rank the influence of soil tillage and semi-natural habitats on parasitism rates, and to quantify the importance of each scale. Parasitism rates were due to three univoltine parasitoid species (Tersilochus heterocerus, Phradis morionellus and P. interstitialis) and varied from 0 to 98%. We found that both fine and large scales contributed to explain significantly parasitism rates, indicating that biological control of pollen beetle is a multi-scale process. At the 250 m scale, parasitism rates of T. heterocerus were positively related to the proportion of semi-natural habitats and the proximity to previous year OSR fields. At large scales (1500 to 2000 m), parasitism rates of T. heterocerus were positively related to semi-natural habitats and negatively related to the proportion of previous year OSR fields with conventional soil tillage. Parasitism rates of Phradis spp. were only positively related to the proportion of semi-natural habitats at the 1250 and 1500 m scales. These multi-scale effects are discussed in relation to the influence of semi-natural habitats and soil tillage on parasitoid populations and their movement behaviours within the landscape.
引用
收藏
页码:473 / 486
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Identify causality by multi-scale structural complexity
    Wang, Ping
    Gu, Changgui
    Yang, Huijie
    Wang, Haiying
    PHYSICA A-STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS, 2024, 366
  • [22] Pollen beetle mortality is increased by ground-dwelling generalist predators but not landscape complexity
    Riggi, Laura G.
    Gagic, Vesna
    Rusch, Adrien
    Malsher, Gerard
    Ekbom, Barbara
    Bommarco, Riccardo
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 250 : 133 - 142
  • [23] Multi-Scale Effects of Landscape Pattern on Soundscape Perception in Residential Green Spaces
    Liu, Jiang
    Huang, Yi-Jun
    Chen, Zhu
    Hong, Xin-Chen
    FORESTS, 2023, 14 (12):
  • [24] Integrated Crop-Livestock Systems for Nitrogen Management: A Multi-Scale Spatial Analysis
    Ghimire, Suraj
    Wang, Jingjing
    Fleck, John R.
    ANIMALS, 2021, 11 (01): : 1 - 21
  • [25] Landscape complexity effects on Brassicogethes aeneus abundance and larval parasitism rate: a two-year field study
    Silva Vilumets
    Riina Kaasik
    Marjolein Lof
    Gabriella Kovács
    John Holland
    Eve Veromann
    Scientific Reports, 13
  • [26] Landscape complexity effects on Brassicogethes aeneus abundance and larval parasitism rate: a two-year field study
    Vilumets, Silva
    Kaasik, Riina
    Lof, Marjolein
    Kovacs, Gabriella
    Holland, John
    Veromann, Eve
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2023, 13 (01)
  • [27] Integrating Landscape Analysis and Planning: A Multi-Scale Approach for Oriented Management of Tourist Recreation
    de Aranzabal, Itziar
    Schmitz, Maria F.
    Pineda, Francisco D.
    ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2009, 44 (05) : 938 - 951
  • [28] Integrating Landscape Analysis and Planning: A Multi-Scale Approach for Oriented Management of Tourist Recreation
    Itziar de Aranzabal
    María F. Schmitz
    Francisco D. Pineda
    Environmental Management, 2009, 44 : 938 - 951
  • [29] Multi-scale sampling of plant diversity in pastures varying in grazing management and landscape position
    Guretzky, JA
    Moore, KJ
    Brummer, EC
    Wiedenhoeft, MH
    AMERICAN FORAGE AND GRASSLAND COUNCIL, VOL 11, PROCEEDINGS, 2002, 11 : 2 - 2
  • [30] Multi-scale sampling of plant diversity in pastures varying in grazing management and landscape position
    Guretzky, JA
    Moore, KJ
    Brummer, EC
    Wiedenhoeft, MH
    AMERICAN FORAGE AND GRASSLAND COUNCIL, VOL 11, PROCEEDINGS, 2002, 11 : 80 - 84