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                                                  INTRODUCTION
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              BIOLOGICAL PEST CONTROL
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| Introduction             From the 1900’s the partial,
  substantial and complete biological control of a large number of insects,
  mites, weeds and mammals has been attained in over 70 countries.  As an adjunct to other methods, it is
  safe, effective and usually permanent. 
  Emphasis on the biological control method can act to restore the
  erosion of the human environment by de-emphasizing such disruptive methods of
  pest control as some cultural practices, and notably the use of
  broad-spectrum pesticides.             California took an early lead and
  continues to be one of the major centers for biological control work.  By 1961, approximately 1/3d of all the
  beneficial insects established in the continental United States had been
  introduced by California-based organizations. --- During the 1980's and early
  1990's UC Riverside and Berkeley had maintained a total of about 18 full-time
  professional staff plus several emeriti, and about 10 research associates,
  and graduate students that varied from 10-20.             On a national scale, the U. S.
  Department of Agriculture employs varying numbers (25-40) of entomologists in
  biological control work, depending on active programs.  On the world scene, it is estimated that
  there have been aver 300 entomologists engaged in classical practical
  biological control work in any one year. 
  This does not include persons engaged in fundamental research only.   Economics  Some examples of individual projects give fairly accurate
  figures for the damage caused by a pest of and the cost of biological control
  work as follows:   Permanent control of the coconut scale, Aspidiotus destructor,
  on the Portuguese Island of Principe off the west coast of Africa was
  achieved by the introduction of the coccinellid predator Cryptognatha nodiceps
  from Trinidad in 1955.  Losses in
  copra production, the principal crop of Principe, caused by the coconut scale
  were estimated at 900 tons annually, which was then worth about #72,000
  (English pounds).  At a cost of #200, Cryptognatha was collected and
  shipped to Principe by the CIBC, which also supplied an entomologist who for
  one year bred the predator, supervised its release, establishment and spread,
  etc. at an additional cost of #3,500. 
  The total cost of this project, therefore, was about #3,700.  The financial return from the complete
  control has been about #1,000,000 as of 1970, or a 1,800% return per
  annum.  Not a bad investment!   Introduced natural enemies have very successfully controlled
  the sugar cane moth borers, Diatraea spp., in certain areas of the
  West Indies and South America.  For example,
  in Antigua the cost of liberations of Lixophaga diatraeae during 1931 and 1945
  was about #8.500.  The case return
  from this project in terms of increased sugar at the factory and increased
  yields in the field has been about #16,000 annually since 1934, or about 200%
  per annum and about #552,000 to 1961. 
  The later acquisition of Apanteles flavipes Cameron from India further increased the
  magnitude of biological control so that savings soared beyond this
  level.  On the island of St. Kitts,
  where permanent control was achieved, the total cost of introducing Lixophaga in 1934 was
  #200.  The resulting benefits have
  accrued to about #50,000/annum or #1,700,000 by 1970, a return of 15,000% per
  annum!   There are many other examples where estimates are not so
  simple.  Evaluation of the worth of
  many of the successes listed in Chapters 23 & 24 of the DeBach (1964)
  text is, unfortunately, impossible.  
  Chapter 1 of the DeBach (1964) shows a rough balance for biological
  control work carried out in California for the interval 1923-1959.  Considering a total budget outlay of about
  $4,300,000 against about $115,800,000 benefits realized from just five
  successful biological control projects, the citrophilous mealybug, the black
  scale, the grapeleaf skeletonizer, the spotted alfalfa aphid and the Klamath
  weed, it is obvious that the economic returns from funds invested have been
  of the nature that any businessman would consider extremely
  satisfactory.  An estimate of the
  present benefits being derived from these five successes is about $10,500,000
  annually, not to mention the reduction of pesticidal threats to the
  environment.   It must be kept in mind that many more than five successes are
  registered, but economic data is difficult to derive.  However, this does indicate that
  biological control, though by no means a panacea for all our pest problems
  can be a sound investment and extremely profitable venture.   Important Terms   Natural Enemies
  (predators, parasitoids, pathogens, parasites.  Organisms that prey upon other organisms, parasitize them, or
  cause disease).  Predators are
  organisms that consume more than one host individual or prey during the
  course of their development. 
  Predators are usually free-living in all stages except the egg
  stage.  They kill and consume their
  prey either immediately or within a relatively short period of time.  Some predators feed indiscriminately upon
  various developmental stages and kinds of prey; other are more selective.  Parasites are organisms that live within the
  body of their hosts without killing the host, but usually debilitating them
  to various degrees.  Parasitoids are
  insects that reach maturity by developing upon a single host individual,
  eventually killing same.  Three insect
  orders contain many species that have adopted the parasitoidal habit, namely
  Hymenoptera, Diptera and Strepsiptera, with Hymenoptera being the largest
  representative.  Pathogens include
  viruses, bacteria, protozoa, fungi and nematodes.  They cause diseases of arthropods.   Biological Control is a
  term that has been used both in a fundamental ecological sense and in the
  utilitarian sense to designate a field of human endeavor.  Originally, the term was defined for use
  in the applied sense.  Biological
  control can be considered a phase of natural control or limitation.  Natural Control is the balance of nature,
  natural balance, population balance or what Darwin called "the struggle
  for existence."  Natural control
  has also been considered as "The maintenance of a fluctuating population
  density of an organism with certain definable upper and lower limits over a
  protracted period of time, by the action of abiotic and biotic environmental
  factors."   If we plot the density of any organism (D) against time (T),
  we see that over a protracted period of time its population density will
  fluctuate within certain limits and about a characteristic mean density, that
  of its general equilibrium level.   Natural control is essentially permanent in the absence of
  gross permanent environmental changes. 
  It is characteristic of all plant and animal populations on the face
  of the earth.  Therefore,
  "biological control" can be considered as representing the action
  of natural enemies (biotic factors) in maintaining another organism's
  population density at a lower average level than would occur in the
  absence.     In 1919, Harry Scott Smith <PHOTO> first used the term
  biological control to denote "the utilization of organisms for the
  control of population densities of animals and plants."  Since then many definitions have been
  offered, generating considerable discussion and argument.  Some expand the meaning to cover such
  things as breeding resistant plants and genetic engineering.   An extreme case was presented by Pollard in the 1966 Bulletin Entomological Society
  of America: 
  "Parasites, predators, viruses, bacteria, fungi, nematodes,
  pathogens, birds, mice, skunks, fish.....heat, light, sound, genetics,
  metabolism, X-rays, laser beams, chemosterilants, nutrition, attractants, sex
  lures, gamma irradiation, diapause and ecology.   The International Biological Program gave the simplest
  definition:  "Using biota to
  control biota."  Dr. Jost M.
  Franz <PHOTO> of the Institut für
  Biologische Schädlingsbekämpfung offered the following modification of
  Smith's definition in his 1961 text: 
  "Biological control denotes the active manipulation of
  antagonistic organisms by man to reduce pest population densities, both plant
  and animal, to non-economically important levels."   Autocidal Control is the
  mass release of artificially sterilized or genetically inferior individuals
  which are used to inundate and possibly eradicate geographically isolated
  pest populations.   Other Controls include
  chemical, cultural, resistant varieties of crops and legislative control
  (quarantine)             The modern approach to pest control considers, and in
  various ways utilizes, all of the eight kinds of control.  As a result we have gravely suffered in
  the execution of the classical approach in that only a fraction of the
  control research funds has been spent on it during the past several
  decades.  Hopefully we are entering a
  new era of awareness and will elevate the classical approach to a higher
  priority, since history shows that it nest the greatest permanent effects in
  pest control.       Exercise 1.1--  Is the biological
  control approach cost effective? 
  Explain.   Exercise 1.2-- Name and describe four kinds of natural enemy.   Exercise 1.3-- What is natural control? 
  Biological control?   Exercise 1.4-- What is the modern approach to pest control?     REFERENCES        [Additional references may be
  found at  MELVYL
  Library ]   Aliniazee, M. T. & B. A.
  Croft.  1999.  Biological control in deciduous fruit
  crops.  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 28, 743-759, Handbook of Biological Control:  
  Principles and Applications. 
  Academic Press, San Diego, New York. 
  1046 p.   Altieri, M. A.
  & C. I. Nicholls.  1999.  Classical biological control in Latin America:  past, present and future. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 39, p.
  975-991, Handbook  of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Bellows, T. S.  1999. 
  Controlling soil-borne plant pathogens.  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 26, p. 699-711, Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles
  and  Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Bellows, T. S.  1999. 
  Foliar, flower and fruit pathogens. 
  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 32, p. 841-851, Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles
  and  Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Bellows, T. S.  1999. 
  Whither, hence, prometheus? 
  The future of biological control. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 1011-1015, Handbook of
  Biological Control:Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Bellows, T. S. & T. W. Fisher
  (eds.).  1999. Handbook of Biological Control: 
  Principles and Applications. 
  Academic Press, San Diego, New York. 
  1046 p.   Bellows, T. S. & D. H.
  Headrick.  1999.  Arthropods and vertebrates in biological
  control of plants. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 17, p. 505-515, Handbook
  of  Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Bellows, T. S. & R. G. Van
  Driesche.  1999.  Life table construction and analysis for
  evaluating biological control agents. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 8, p. 199 223.,  Handbook of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Cooper, B.  1999. 
  Genetic mechanisms for engineering host resistance to plant
  viruses.  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 20, p. 557-573, Handbook of Biological 
  Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Dahlsten, D.
  L. & R. D. Hall.  1999.  Biological control of insects in urban environments. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 36, p.
  919-933, Handbook of Biological  Control: 
  Principles and Applications. 
  Academic Press, San Diego, New York. 
  1046 p.   Dahlsten, D.
  L. & N. J. Mills.  1999.  Biological control of forest insects. In:  T. S. Bellows
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 29, p. 761-787, Handbook of Biological Control: 
  Principles  and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   DeBach, P.
  (ed.).  1964.  Biological Control of Insect Pests and Weeds.  Reinhold Publ. Co., New York.  844 p.   Dodds, J. A.  Cross-protection and systemic acquired
  resistance for control of plant diseases. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 19, p. 549-555, Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Elzen, G. W.
  & E. G. King.  1999.  Periodic release and manipulation of natural enemies. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 11, p.
  253-269, Handbook of Biological  Control: 
  Principles and Applications. 
  Academic Press, San Diego, New York. 
  1046 p.   264. Etzel, L. K.
  & E. F. Legner.  1999.  Culture and Colonization. 
  In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter 15, p. 125-197, Handbook
  of Biological Control:   Principles
  and Applications.  Academic Press,
  San Diego, CA  1046 p.   Federici, B. A.  1999. 
  A perspective on pathogens as biological control agents for insect
  pests.  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 18, p. 517-547, Handbook of  Biological
  Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Federici, B. A.  1999. 
  Bacillus thuringiensis in
  biological control.  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 21, p.
  575-592, Handbook of Biological
  Control:  Principles  and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Flaherty, D. L. & L. T.
  Wilson.  1999.  Biological control of insects and mites on
  grapes. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 33, p. 853-869, Handbook of
  Biological  Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Franz, J.
  M.  1961.  Biologische Schädlingsbekämpfung.  Paul Parey, Berlin & Hamburg.  302 p.   Fulbright, D. W.  1999. 
  Hypovirulence to control fungal pathogenesis.  1999. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 25, p. 691-697, Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, New York.  1046
  p.    Garcia, R. & E. F. Legner.  1999.  Biological
  control of medical and veterinary pests. In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter 15, p. 935-953, Handbook
  of Biological   Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, CA  1046 P.   Goeden, R.
  D.  & L. A. Andrés.  1999.  Biological
  control of weeds in terrestrial and aquatic environments. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 34, p.
  871-889, Handbook of  Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Gordh, G. & J. W.
  Beardsley.  Taxonomy and Biological
  Control.  1999.  In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter 3, p. 45-55, Handbook
  of Biological Control: 
  Principles  and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Gordh, G., E. F. Legner & L. E.
  Caltagirone.  1999.  Biology of parasitic Hymenoptera.  In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.),  Chapter 15, p. 355-381, Handbook of  Biological Control: 
  Principles and Applications. 
  Academic Press, San Diego, CA 
  1046 p.   Greathead, D. J. (ed.).  A Review of Biological Control in Western
  and Southern Europe.  Tech. Commun.
  No. 7, Commonwealth Agricultural Bureaux, Farnham Royal, Slough SL2 3BN,
  England.   182
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  A. P., L. E. Caltagirone & W. Meikle. 
  1999.   Evaluation of Results.  In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 10, p. 243-251, Handbook of
  Biological Control Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Hoddle, M. S.  1999. 
  Biological control of vertebrate pests. In:  T. S. Bellows
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Chapter 38, p. 955-973, Handbook of Biological Control: 
  Principles and Applications. 
  Academic Press, San Diego, New York. 
  1046 p.   Johnson, M. W. & B. E.
  Tabashnik.  1999.  Enhanced biological control through
  pesticide selectivity. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 13, p. 297-317, Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
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  & J. W. Beardsley.  1999.  Biological control in subtropical and
  tropical crops. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 713-741, Handbook of  Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Kogan, M., D. Gerling & J. V.
  Maddox.  1999.  Enhancement of biological control in
  annual agricultural environments. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher (eds.),
  Chapter 30, p. 789 817,  Handbook of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.    Legner, E. F.  1995.  Biological control of Diptera of medical and veterinary
  importance.  J. Vector Ecology 20(1):
  59-120.    Legner, E. F.  2000.  Biological control of aquatic
  Diptera.  p. 847-870.  Contributions to a Manual of Palaearctic
  Diptera, Vol. 1, Science  Herald,
  Budapest.  978 p.    Legner, E. F. & T. S. Bellows, Jr..  1999. 
  Exploration for natural enemies. 
  In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows (eds.),
  Chapter 15, p. 87- 101., Handbook of
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  Diego, CA  1046 p.   Letourneau, D.
  K. & M. A. Altieri.  1999.  Environmental management to enhance biological control in
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  Chapter 14, p. 319 353,  Handbook of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Luck, R. F., L. Nunney & R.
  Stouthamer.  1999.  Sex ratio and quality in the culturing of
  parasitic Hymenoptera:  a genetic and
  evolutionary perspective. In:  T. S. Bellows & T. W. Fisher  (eds.), Chapter 23, p. 653-671, Handbook of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Nicholson, A.
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  1046 p.   Perkins, J. H. & R. Garcia.  1999. 
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  1046 p.   |