Habitat Management to Suppress Pest Populations: Progress and Prospects
Charles Sturt University · Institute of Applied Ecology · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Habitat management involving manipulation of farmland vegetation can exert direct suppressive effects on pests and promote natural enemies. Advances in theory and practical techniques have allowed habitat management to become an important subdiscipline of pest management. Improved understanding of biodiversity-ecosystem function relationships means that researchers now have a firmer theoretical foundation on which to design habitat management strategies for pest suppression in agricultural systems, including landscape-scale effects. Supporting natural enemies with shelter, nectar, alternative prey/hosts, and pollen (SNAP) has emerged as a major research topic and applied tactic with field tests and adoption…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 135.92
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 150
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Integrated pest management
- Habitat
- Environmental resource management
- Ecosystem services
- Biology
- Biodiversity
- Ecology
- Ecosystem