General Concepts of Biological Control

IMPORTANT CHARACTERISTICS:
a) Often relatively inexpensive and can be “permanent” for those biocontrol agents that can survive multiple years and become self-perpetuating.
b) Effectiveness can be from low to high.
c) Can be disrupted by other pest management tactics, especially broad-spectrum pesticides.
d) Suppressive effects are density-dependent; it will have its greatest impact when pest densities are high.
e) Often pest-specific, not broad-spectrum.
f) Often a lag time between buildup of the pest population and buildup of the biocontrol agent; generally not fast-acting.
g) Good tactic to include in a multi-tactic approach (IPM); fits in well with cultural, mechanical, and some
h) chemical controls.
i) Most successes have been in perennial crops (orchards, vineyards), rangeland, and field or forage crops which can withstand a moderate level of pest injury.
GENERAL METHODS
Biological control agents can be purchased from commercial suppliers and released for supplementary
control of pests. However, most biological control occurs without assistance from people. Many predators, parasites and pathogens occur naturally and are continually working to help keep nature in balance. The importance of natural enemies is often not appreciated until a broad spectrum pesticide, which kills many beneficials as well as the targeted pest, is applied and a new pest – suddenly released from biological control – becomes a serious problem. Conservation and enhancement of natural enemies already present in the system can be a very effective method of biological control.
1. Introduction = Importation
2. Augmentation = Mass Culture or Collection and Release
Inundative Release– a single release of large numbers of a natural enemy; release can be in a small or large area; natural enemy does not become established and reproduce; goal is a one-time reduction in pest numbers. Inoculative Release– multiple, smaller releases of a natural enemy over a period of time; natural enemy is expected to colonize and spread in the area of release.
3. Conservation and Enhancement
Utilization of practices that protect, maintain and enhance already existing natural enemy populations.
Such practices could include habitat diversification to provide additional shelter or food for a natural enemy, provision of artificial food supplements, use of pesticides that are selective for target pests and have minimal effects on natural enemies, avoiding cultural practices that disturb or destroy natural enemies, etc.
1. Parasites and Parasitoids
Parasite– an organism that lives in or on the body of another organism (the host) during some portion of its life cycle.
2. Predators
Predator– “Free-living animal that feeds on other animals (prey); it may attack prey in both its immature and adult stages; usually more than one prey individual is required for the predator to complete its life cycle.”Major types of animals that are predators: birds, fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, arthropods, and some plants (e.g., Venus fly trap). Major types of insects that are predaceous: dragonflies and damselflies, mantids, true bugs, some thrips, lacewings and relatives, beetles, some wasps and ants, and some flies. Spiders and some mites are also important predators of arthropods.
3. Pathogens
Use of microbial pathogens has become a very popular method of pest management. Major pathogens used in biological control of insects:Bacteria– Bacillus thuringiensis= Bt (many caterpillar pests, beetles, mosquitoes, others).Viruses– Nucleopolyhedrosis viruses (Gypsy moth, European corn borer), granulosis viruses (Codling moth).Fungi– Metarhizium(cockroach motels), Beauveria bassiana (Colorado potato beetle, Corn rootworms).Protozoa– Nosema locustae(grasshoppers).Nematodes – Steinernemaand Heterorhabditisspp. (Soil weevils, Stem-boring caterpillars).
4. Herbivorous Insects and Microbial
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