4.6 Article

Prays oleae (Bernard), its potential predators and biocontrol depend on the structure of the surrounding landscape

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
Volume 176, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2022.105092

Keywords

Olive moth; Chrysopidae; Anthocoridae; Landscape structure; Mean shape index; Patch richness

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain
  2. European Regional Development Fund [RTA2013-00039-C03-03]

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The complexity of the landscape has an impact on the biological control of the olive moth, favoring lacewings and egg predation in complex landscapes. The study also suggests that simple landscapes are more susceptible to olive moth attacks.
Arthropod populations from agricultural fields sometimes depend on the surrounding landscape structure, both composition and configuration, which affects multiple life-history traits of arthropods such as resources for survival, dispersion or death risk (e.g., predation or parasitism). Moreover, the effect of the landscape may vary with the distance to the crop, depending on factors such as the organism requirements and dispersion capabil-ities. This work addresses the effect of landscape (at five different scales from 250 to 1500 m) on the olive moth (Prays oleae Bernard, a key pest in olive orchards), some of its most relevant natural enemies, and biological control. The two-years study in 15 olive groves in southeastern Madrid, Spain shows that landscape complexity favours control of the olive moth, P. oleae. Simple landscapes favour P. oleae attack to the crop (measured as oviposition of the anthophagous generation) and that egg predation of the carpophagous generation is in some cases enhanced in complex landscapes. Lacewings (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae) are responsible for egg predation and populations increase in complex landscapes. On the other hand, the role of pirate bugs (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae) as a biological control agent of this part of the life cycle of P. oleae was not demonstrated. They respond primarily to Euphyllura olivina (Costa) (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) populations and are more abundant in simple landscapes. Most of the significant relationships of pest attack were detected at 750-1000 m radii buffers around the sampled olive groves suggesting that this is the main activity range for adults of P. oleae anthoph-agous generation. In sum, our results suggest complex configurations of the landscape enhance the biological control of P. oleae through favouring lacewings and egg predation of the carpophagous generation.

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