An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control

Importation biological control represents the planned introduction of a specialist natural enemy from the region of origin of an invasive pest or weed. For this study, the author considered why attempts to develop a predictive theory for biological control have been misguided and what future directi...

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Main Author: Nicholas J. Mills
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Insects
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/9/4/131
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spelling doaj-72ba678d58154bfba1f5dc62092e539d2020-11-24T21:46:26ZengMDPI AGInsects2075-44502018-10-019413110.3390/insects9040131insects9040131An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological ControlNicholas J. Mills0Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114, USAImportation biological control represents the planned introduction of a specialist natural enemy from the region of origin of an invasive pest or weed. For this study, the author considered why attempts to develop a predictive theory for biological control have been misguided and what future directions might be more promising and effective. Despite considerable interest in the theory of consumer–resource population dynamics, such theory has contributed little to improvements in the success of biological control due to a focus on persistence and equilibrium dynamics rather than establishment and impact. A broader consideration of invasion biology in addition to population ecology offers new opportunities for a more inclusive theory of biological control that incorporates the demographic and genetic processes that more specifically address the establishment and impact of introduced natural enemies. The importance of propagule size and genetic variance for successful establishment, and of contributions to host population growth, relative population growth rates, interaction strength, and coevolution for suppression of host abundance are discussed as promising future directions for a theory of biological control.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/9/4/131pestweedimportationestablishmentimpactdemographygenetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicholas J. Mills
spellingShingle Nicholas J. Mills
An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control
Insects
pest
weed
importation
establishment
impact
demography
genetics
author_facet Nicholas J. Mills
author_sort Nicholas J. Mills
title An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control
title_short An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control
title_full An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control
title_fullStr An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control
title_full_unstemmed An Alternative Perspective for the Theory of Biological Control
title_sort alternative perspective for the theory of biological control
publisher MDPI AG
series Insects
issn 2075-4450
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Importation biological control represents the planned introduction of a specialist natural enemy from the region of origin of an invasive pest or weed. For this study, the author considered why attempts to develop a predictive theory for biological control have been misguided and what future directions might be more promising and effective. Despite considerable interest in the theory of consumer–resource population dynamics, such theory has contributed little to improvements in the success of biological control due to a focus on persistence and equilibrium dynamics rather than establishment and impact. A broader consideration of invasion biology in addition to population ecology offers new opportunities for a more inclusive theory of biological control that incorporates the demographic and genetic processes that more specifically address the establishment and impact of introduced natural enemies. The importance of propagule size and genetic variance for successful establishment, and of contributions to host population growth, relative population growth rates, interaction strength, and coevolution for suppression of host abundance are discussed as promising future directions for a theory of biological control.
topic pest
weed
importation
establishment
impact
demography
genetics
url http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/9/4/131
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