open access publication

Article, 2023

Parasitoids of the cabbage seed weevil deliver high and consistent parasitism in variable landscapes: A showcase of conservation biocontrol

Pest Management Science, ISSN 1096-9063, 1526-4998, 1526-498x, 0031-613X, Volume 80, 5, Pages 2362-2370, 10.1002/ps.7679

Contributors

Langer, Vibeke 0000-0001-6789-1352 (Corresponding author) [1] Jensen, Signe Marie 0000-0002-7738-5231 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Insect pest resistance to insecticides and societal pressure to reduce pesticide load has increased oilseed rape (OSR) farmers' motivation to protect and exploit parasitoids for pest control. However, parasitoid presence and parasitism must be made visible to influence farmers' spraying decisions. Parasitism of cabbage seed weevil (CSW) (Ceutorhynchus obstrictus (Marsham)) reduces damage to OSR immediately, making them a good case for demonstrating conservation biocontrol to farmers. We assessed the occurrence and activity of CSW parasitoids in 84 OSR fields over 2 years and identified the impact of associated local landscape factors. RESULTS: Mean cabbage seed weevil infestation rates were 11% and 10% in 2020 and 2021, and parasitism rates were high in both years (75% and 74%, respectively). Temporal and spatial dynamics of OSR in the landscape surrounding the focal fields were important for both CSW and parasitoid numbers, suggesting a dilution effect for increasing OSR area since the previous year. A multimodel inference analysis showed that OSR-related factors were important predictors for both the infestation rate of CSW and the number of parasitoids. For parasitoids, protected nature areas and hedgerows were important. Parasitism rates were high and largely unaffected by landscape factors. CONCLUSION: CSW and its parasitoids respond similarly to interannual changes in the OSR resource; in addition, parasitoids benefit from uncropped areas in the surrounding landscape. The complexity of the pest and parasitoid response to landscape factors limits the prospect of designing landscapes for improved pest control by the parasitoids. Parasitoids of CSW may be present as local populations in agricultural landscapes with the potential for consistent and substantial parasitism. © 2023 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.

Keywords

activity, agricultural landscapes, analysis, area, biocontrol, cabbage, cabbage seed weevil, changes, complex, conservation, conservation biocontrol, control, damage, decision, design landscape, dilution, dilution effect, effect, factors, farmers, farmers’ motivations, field, focal field, hedgerows, impact, improved pest control, inference analysis, infestation, infestation rate, insect pest resistance, insecticides, interannual changes, landscape, landscape factors, load, local population, motivation, multimodel inference analysis, number, occurrence, oilseed rape, oilseed rape fields, parasites, parasitism rates, parasitoid numbers, parasitoid presence, parasitoids, pest, pest control, pest resistance, pesticide load, population, potential, predictors, presence, pressure, rape, rate, reduce damage, reduce pesticide loads, resistance, resources, seed weevil, societal pressures, spatial dynamics, spray decisions, surrounding landscape, uncropped areas, variable landscape, weevil, years

Funders

  • Danish Ministry of Environment

Data Provider: Digital Science