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      Reduce pests, enhance production: benefits of intercropping at high densities for okra farmers in Cameroon : Benefits of intercropping at high densities

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          Organization of a Plant-Arthropod Association in Simple and Diverse Habitats: The Fauna of Collards (Brassica Oleracea)

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            Habitat management to conserve natural enemies of arthropod pests in agriculture.

            Many agroecosystems are unfavorable environments for natural enemies due to high levels of disturbance. Habitat management, a form of conservation biological control, is an ecologically based approach aimed at favoring natural enemies and enhancing biological control in agricultural systems. The goal of habitat management is to create a suitable ecological infrastructure within the agricultural landscape to provide resources such as food for adult natural enemies, alternative prey or hosts, and shelter from adverse conditions. These resources must be integrated into the landscape in a way that is spatially and temporally favorable to natural enemies and practical for producers to implement. The rapidly expanding literature on habitat management is reviewed with attention to practices for favoring predators and parasitoids, implementation of habitat management, and the contributions of modeling and ecological theory to this developing area of conservation biological control. The potential to integrate the goals of habitat management for natural enemies and nature conservation is discussed.
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              The use of push-pull strategies in integrated pest management.

              Push-pull strategies involve the behavioral manipulation of insect pests and their natural enemies via the integration of stimuli that act to make the protected resource unattractive or unsuitable to the pests (push) while luring them toward an attractive source (pull) from where the pests are subsequently removed. The push and pull components are generally nontoxic. Therefore, the strategies are usually integrated with methods for population reduction, preferably biological control. Push-pull strategies maximize efficacy of behavior-manipulating stimuli through the additive and synergistic effects of integrating their use. By orchestrating a predictable distribution of pests, efficiency of population-reducing components can also be increased. The strategy is a useful tool for integrated pest management programs reducing pesticide input. We describe the principles of the strategy, list the potential components, and present case studies reviewing work on the development and use of push-pull strategies in each of the major areas of pest control.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Pest Management Science
                Pest. Manag. Sci
                Wiley
                1526498X
                October 2017
                October 2017
                August 10 2017
                : 73
                : 10
                : 2017-2027
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Terrestrial Ecology Research Group, Department for Ecology and Ecosystem Management; Technische Universität München; Freising Germany
                [2 ]International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA); Yaoundé Cameroon
                Article
                10.1002/ps.4636
                28585376
                741102e6-5ead-462b-83ec-72afbbd0d43a
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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