4.7 Article

Global patterns in the biocontrol efficacy of spiders: A meta-analysis

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 28, Issue 9, Pages 1366-1378

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/geb.12927

Keywords

agroecosystem; generalist; interaction intensity; latitude; pest; predation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aim To investigate the overall effect of spiders on pest suppression and crop performance, and to explore the extent to which the biocontrol efficacy of spiders depends on the characteristics of spiders, pests, agroecosystems, climate and geography. Location Global. Time period 1970-2017. Major taxa studied Spiders. Methods We performed a meta-analysis of 58 published studies where we investigated (a) the overall effect of spiders on pest density and crop performance; (b) the extent to which the biocontrol efficacy of spiders depends on the taxonomy of pests (aphids, leafhoppers, beetles, and lepidopteran larvae), the hunting strategy of spiders (hunters, web-weavers), crop type (vine, cabbage, wheat, rice), climate, and geography. Results Spiders suppressed agricultural pest insects in 79% of cases. The mean effect size of increased spider density on pest suppression was large (Hedge's d = 0.89; 95% confidence interval (CI95 )= 0.66-1.12). Spider pest suppression efficacy slightly increased also with taxonomic diversity (d = 0.33; CI95 = 0.05-0.61). The effects of spiders cascaded down and improved crop performance (d = 2.3, CI95 = 0.70-3.84). The effects of spiders seemed to escalate rather than attenuate down through the agricultural food-chains (regression slopes > 1). The biocontrol efficacy of spiders was highest in rice followed by grape, cabbage and wheat. The pest suppression efficacy of spiders and the positive effect of spiders on crop yield slightly increased towards the tropics and with mean annual temperature. Spiders suppressed the four pest groups with similar efficacy. Main conclusions The meta-analysis provides strong evidence that spiders are effective in natural pest control and improve crop performance. However, the efficacy of spiders differed among crops. Our study substantiates the few earlier findings that predation pressure and the intensity of trophic cascades in terrestrial ecosystems intensify towards the tropics.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available