Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2414474 Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study examined the impact of pest-management practices on Hymenopteran parasitoid diversity and assemblage composition in six apple orchards in southeastern Michigan, USA. The orchards comprised a gradient of pest-management intensity from organic to IPM to conventional practices. We used a pesticide toxicity index to quantify monthly and seasonal pest-management intensity in each orchard and conducted monthly vacuum-sampling of wasps during summer of 2009.Monthly toxicity scores predicted wasp abundance, setting an upper bound on the number of wasps in the orchard, but did not predict species richness. Total species richness was significantly higher in the organic orchard than in all others, but in August a conventional orchard had the highest wasp abundance and species richness. These results suggest that a toxicity index could guide pesticide choices or application times so as to increase parasitoid wasp populations, which have untapped potential for pest management in apple orchards.

► Toxicity, wasp abundance and species richness varied among orchards and across months. ► Monthly toxicity scores predicted monthly wasp abundance but not species richness. ► The organic orchard had significantly higher total wasp species richness than IPM or conventional orchards.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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