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      Highly diversified crop systems can promote the dispersal and foraging activity of the generalist predator Harmonia axyridis

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          Abstract

          High plant biodiversity and landscape food provision stability is known to have a positive impact on biocontrol services provided by natural enemies. However, few studies have assessed how differential spatial and temporal crop richness actually impact biocontrol services, and notably how natural enemies may spill-over among crops. Within this framework, using a four-cage maze system under laboratory conditions, we evaluated the effect of a diversified crop system (four crops, namely cotton, tomato, squash and soybean) and low diversified crop systems (one single crop), on the generalist predator Harmonia axyridis (Pallas) and its predation capacity on aphids. The system varied food availability both in space, i.e. different cages, and in time, i.e. different dates of resources implementation. In general, the effects of crops on the natural enemies’ traits observed in the diversified crop system resulted from the average effects of the individual low diversified crop systems; the impact of the predator was highly dependent on the plant. Low diversified crop systems actually proved to be either very suitable for the predator’s development (tomato and squash), or not at all (soybean and cotton), but inversely suitable in reducing pest population with lower efficacy in tomato and squash and higher efficacy in soybean and cotton. The spillover of the ladybird was strongest in the squash low diversified crop system and lowest in the cotton one, other systems showing intermediate spillover values. In the diversified crop system, the ladybird presence was always closely related to plant presence, and aphid populations were maintained at a stable population increase. Still, the predator was also found in cages lacking plants, as opposed to the low diversified crop systems; this hinted at the potential of the highly diversified crop system to promote ladybird dispersal and increase foraging activity. We demonstrate that increasing crop diversity in agroecosystems may help promote biocontrol services provided by H. axyridis by promoting its spillover between crops (e.g. while the plants are senescing and/or when they are harvested).

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          Widespread adoption of Bt cotton and insecticide decrease promotes biocontrol services.

          Over the past 16 years, vast plantings of transgenic crops producing insecticidal proteins from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) have helped to control several major insect pests and reduce the need for insecticide sprays. Because broad-spectrum insecticides kill arthropod natural enemies that provide biological control of pests, the decrease in use of insecticide sprays associated with Bt crops could enhance biocontrol services. However, this hypothesis has not been tested in terms of long-term landscape-level impacts. On the basis of data from 1990 to 2010 at 36 sites in six provinces of northern China, we show here a marked increase in abundance of three types of generalist arthropod predators (ladybirds, lacewings and spiders) and a decreased abundance of aphid pests associated with widespread adoption of Bt cotton and reduced insecticide sprays in this crop. We also found evidence that the predators might provide additional biocontrol services spilling over from Bt cotton fields onto neighbouring crops (maize, peanut and soybean). Our work extends results from general studies evaluating ecological effects of Bt crops by demonstrating that such crops can promote biocontrol services in agricultural landscapes.
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            Does plant diversity benefit agroecosystems? A synthetic review

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              Crop pests and predators exhibit inconsistent responses to surrounding landscape composition

              Significance Decades of research have fostered the now-prevalent assumption that noncrop habitat facilitates better pest suppression by providing shelter and food resources to the predators and parasitoids of crop pests. Based on our analysis of the largest pest-control database of its kind, noncrop habitat surrounding farm fields does affect multiple dimensions of pest control, but the actual responses of pests and enemies are highly variable across geographies and cropping systems. Because noncrop habitat often does not enhance biological control, more information about local farming contexts is needed before habitat conservation can be recommended as a viable pest-suppression strategy. Consequently, when pest control does not benefit from noncrop vegetation, farms will need to be carefully comanaged for competing conservation and production objectives.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                entomologia
                Entomologia Generalis
                Journal of General and Applied Entomology - Zeitschrift für Allgemeine und Angewandte Entomologie
                entomologia
                Schweizerbart Science Publishers (Stuttgart, Germany http://www.schweizerbart.com/ mail@ 123456schweizerbart.de )
                0171-8177
                19 May 2020
                03 April 2020
                : 40
                : 2
                : 133-145
                Affiliations
                1 Université Côte d’Azur, INRAE, CNRS, UMR ISA, 06000 Nice, France
                2 INRAE, ISVV, Univ. Bordeaux, Bordeaux Sciences Agro, UMR SAVE, 33883 Villenave d’Ornon, France
                Author notes
                Article
                93346 0894
                10.1127/entomologia/2020/0894
                5fbe086a-e839-4df1-b7da-46cd3fb28910
                Copyright © 2020 E. Schweizerbart’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 70176 Stuttgart, Germany
                History
                : 18 June 2019
                : 09 August 2019
                : 15 November 2019
                : 16 December 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 6, Pages: 13
                Custom metadata
                1
                research_paper

                Entomology,Parasitology,Ecology,Molecular biology,Pests, Diseases & Weeds
                resource diversity,ladybird,monoculture,generalist predator,aphid,polyculture

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