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| BIOLOGICAL
  PEST CONTROL IN EURASIA (Contacts)               This broad region has traditionally
  experienced pest organisms of native origin which are managed in a variety of
  ways that do not usually include classical biological control. With the
  exception of certain Mediterranean areas, classical biological control is not
  practiced. There is considerable emphasis on the deployment of pathogenic
  organisms, and on augmentation with parasitoids, especially in glasshouse
  culture. The preservation of naturally occurring predators and parasitoids is
  also emphasized. Nevertheless, there are real possibilities for the
  incorporation of classical biological control tactics, especially against invaded
  pests such as the Colorado potato beetle, synanthropic flies and cockroaches,
  as well as exotic weeds. Development
  and application of biological control in Europe was reviewed by Franz
  (1961a,b), Franz & Krieg (1972), Greathead
  (1976), Hagen & Franz (1973), Hussey & Scopes (1986), van Lenteren
  (1986) and van Lenteren & Woets (1988).  According
  to these authors, an initial practical demonstration of biological control in
  Europe was in France in 1840. M. Boisgiraud released the carabid Calosoma sycophanta (L.) against the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar (L.) on poplars. At the same time in Germany, J. R.
  C. Ratzeburg moved heavily parasitized Dendrolimus
  pini (L.) into an outbreak
  area and recommended the use of ants, Formica
  rufa group, against forest
  defoliators. The method of artificial colonization of forest ants has been
  studied extensively in the 20th century (Greathead 1976). Also efforts to
  increase insectivorous bires by providing nesting facilities were common in
  Europe, and the ant and bird work are specific elements in the European
  pattern of biological control (Franz 1961b). G. L. Hartig had suggested
  conservation of natural enemies in Europe as early as 1827. Many attempts to
  augment existing natural enemy populations were made thereafter, often an a
  local scale. Most are inadequately documented and, therefore, are not treated
  in any detail here. The
  earliest, and unsuccessful, attempt to colonize a natural enemy in Europe was
  the importation of the acarid predator Rhizoglyphus
  phylloxerae (Riley *
  Planchon) in 1873 for control of the grape phylloxera, Viteus vitifolii
  Fitch. The first successful use of exotic organisms was in 1897 when Rodolia cardinalis (Mulsant) was imported to Portugal for control
  of cottony cushion scale, Icerya
  purchasi Maskell, following
  its first appearance in Europe in the previous year. This ladybird beetle was
  later introduced to other European countries and the success strongly
  stimulated interest in "classical" biological control. Several
  other coccinellids were introduced against a variety of pests, but these
  programs were less successful. The
  first introduction of a parasitoid dates to 1906 when Berlese imported Prospaltella berlesi (Howard) against
  mulberry scale Pseudaulacaspis
  pentagona (Targ.) (Berlese
  & Paoli 1916). The failure of the 1926-1944 campaign to control the
  Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa
  decemlineata (Say), tempered
  enthusiasm for biological control in Europe. Apart from Rodolia, classical biological control in Europe has not
  been very successful. The main reason is that Europe has few imported pests.
  Simmonds & Greathead (1977) estimated that more than 60% of the 200
  insect pest species in the United States were imported, whereas very few
  arthropod pests were imported to Europe. The rationale that biological
  control will be most successful in situations where natural enemies are
  imported from abroad, against pests which were also imported, is obviously
  hampering further attempts. Van Lenteren et al. (1987) have
  shown that all combinations of exotic and native natural enemies and pests
  are worth considering. One
  notable exception to a number of failures to deploy exotic natural enemies
  against exotic pests was Speyer's success with the parasitoid Encarsia formosa for control of Trialeurodes
  vaporariorum in glasshouses
  (Speyer 1927). This parasitoid is still commercially used on a large scale,
  and forms the focal point of integrated pest management for glasshouses (van
  Lenteren & Woets 1988). The use of native natural enemies for biological
  control during the first part of the 20th century was summarized by
  Sachtleben (1941) and Greathead (1976). Since Greathead's (1976) review a
  number of native natural enemies have been evaluated and selected for biological
  control and are used commercially (van Lenteren et al. 1987). Interest
  in biological control in Eurasia diminished with the appearance of synthetic
  pesticides after 1940, but the development of resistance and the recognition
  of unwanted side-effects during the 1950's revived biological control
  somewhat, leading to the formation of the International Organization for
  Biological Control (IOBC) in 1956 (now called the Western Palearctic Regional
  Section of the IOBC). This European section of the IOBC has been the driving
  force behind a change of thinking in crop protection since, and coordinated
  many cooperative biological control projects. Inundative
  releases of natural enemies were first undertaken in Russia in 1913 with the
  mass rearing and periodic releases of Trichogramma.
  However, inundation has not been used on as large a scale in western and
  southern Europe. Such releases have figured prominently in the attempt to
  control olive fly, Dacus oleae (Gmel.), using Opius concolor Szépl. (Liotta & Mineo 1968). In Italy O. concolor was successfully deployed during the 1960's but
  its status is presently (1992) unknown. Another major program with inundation
  involved Trichogramma.
  Schieferdekker (1970) reviewed this work. The first experiments date from the
  1920's (Voelkel 1925), but most work was discontinued and rated unsuccessful
  (Greathead 1976). In 1992 there is one project where Trichogramma evanescens
  seems commercially successful in the control of Ostrinia nubilalis.
  The most important development in augmentative releases in western Europe
  have been in glasshouses. However, recent work by Sherif Hassan at the
  Bundesanstalt für Biologische Schädlingsbekämpfung in Darmstadt, Germany
  shows great promise for field vegetable crops (see references). Eurasia
  has served as an important geographic area for export of natural enemies
  principally to the United States and Canada for more than a century (Clausen
  1978, Greathead 1976). Collection and exploration of natural enemies has been
  the area of activity of the Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau's International
  Institute of Biological Control (CIBC), the European Parasite Laboratory of
  the U. S. Department of Agriculture, and the Commonwealth Scientific and
  Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) in Australia. REFERENCES: <bc-62.ref.htm> & <pooled.htm>    [Additional references may
  be found at 
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