The incorporation of landscape management into Conservation Biological Control (CBC) strategies is a priority area of research but is hindered by a lack of harmonisation of the means to describe and measure the effectiveness of CBC, the organisms under focus and the landscape. This paper provides a set of recommendations that represents the consensus amongst experts of the ENDURE network. The most important data values that were identified were: pest population level: natural enemy population or % parasitism/predation; crop damage; estimate of mobility of study organisms (dispersal function) and non-explicit spatial measurements such as the proportion of the landscape offering resources and the connectivity between resource patches. For all these measurements. careful consideration should be given to the appropriate spatial and temporal scale of assessment. For analysis, we advocate an iterative use of modeling tools, particularly individual-based models, and statistical approaches: the former to understand mechanisms underlying the population dynamics of pest and their natural enemies in landscapes and the latter to characterize the observed patterns of these populations in a given landscape.

Conservation biological control at the landscape level: measuring and modelling

Otto S;
2010

Abstract

The incorporation of landscape management into Conservation Biological Control (CBC) strategies is a priority area of research but is hindered by a lack of harmonisation of the means to describe and measure the effectiveness of CBC, the organisms under focus and the landscape. This paper provides a set of recommendations that represents the consensus amongst experts of the ENDURE network. The most important data values that were identified were: pest population level: natural enemy population or % parasitism/predation; crop damage; estimate of mobility of study organisms (dispersal function) and non-explicit spatial measurements such as the proportion of the landscape offering resources and the connectivity between resource patches. For all these measurements. careful consideration should be given to the appropriate spatial and temporal scale of assessment. For analysis, we advocate an iterative use of modeling tools, particularly individual-based models, and statistical approaches: the former to understand mechanisms underlying the population dynamics of pest and their natural enemies in landscapes and the latter to characterize the observed patterns of these populations in a given landscape.
2010
Istituto di Biologia Agro-ambientale e Forestale - IBAF - Sede Porano
Inglese
Holland J., van Helden M., Rossing W., Poehling M., Ferguson A., Lavigne C. (Eds.)
Landscape Management for Functional Biodiversity
WG Meeting Landscape Management for Functional Biodiversity
87
93
7
978-92-9067-230-2
IOBC-WPRS
Zurigo
SVIZZERA
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
14-17/07/2010
Cambridge (UK)
CBC effectiveness; pest ecology; r
spatial and temporal scales
individual-based models
13
none
Petit, S; Lavigne, C; Ferguson, A; Tixier, P; Bohan, D; Denholm, I; Otto, S; Alomar, O; Veres, A; Eggenschwiler, L; Bocci, G; Moonen, Ac; Golla, B...espandi
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/15660
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