Dynamic role of grasslands as sources of soil-dwelling insect pests: New insights from in silico experiments for pest management strategies

•The role of grassland in field colonisation by insect pests is investigated in silico.•Population dynamics of wireworms is modelled, accounting for life cycle and dispersion.•Spatiotemporal effects of grassland in field history, field neighbourhood or their interaction, depend on the pest life cycl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological modelling 2021-01, Vol.440, p.109378, Article 109378
Hauptverfasser: Poggi, Sylvain, Sergent, Mike, Mammeri, Youcef, Plantegenest, Manuel, Le Cointe, Ronan, Bourhis, Yoann
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The role of grassland in field colonisation by insect pests is investigated in silico.•Population dynamics of wireworms is modelled, accounting for life cycle and dispersion.•Spatiotemporal effects of grassland in field history, field neighbourhood or their interaction, depend on the pest life cycle and its dispersal capacity.•Grassy areas can act either as pseudo-sinks or as sources on neighbouring crops.•Control strategies based on grassland arrangements appear trait-specific. Sustainable pest control strategies hinge on the knowledge of movement ecology within the agricultural landscape where contrasted habitat qualities intermingle, thereby influencing arthropod dispersal. Hence, habitat manipulation in space and time can be a lever for action to control pests with regard to landscape compositional constraints. In this study, we examined the role of grassland arrangements in field colonisation by soil-dwelling pests within a dynamic agricultural landscape, and discussed the implications for pest management with a focus on wireworms. For this purpose, we proposed a framework combining (i) a spatially explicit and mechanistic model describing the pest population dynamics in both aerial and soil compartments involved along its life cycle, and (ii) spatiotemporal representations of various landscape contexts. We addressed the role of grassland in plot history, in plot neighbourhood, or in both history and neighbourhood. Our results show that species with a short life cycle are more responsive to changes in land use, and that the neighbourhood effect strongly relies on dispersal mechanisms (random vs directed movements). We also highlight how the arrangement of grassy landscape elements in space and time can mitigate crop infestation by soil-dwelling pests, thereby emphasizing the relevance of managing grassland regimes. Once informed by critical pest life traits, our approach opens avenue for the exploration of the spatiotemporal land use manipulation meant for pest management. Future research consists in the exploration of suppressive patterns in simplified but realistic agricultural landscapes, generated under agronomic constraints at the farm or landscape scales.
ISSN:0304-3800
1872-7026
DOI:10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2020.109378