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| ANALYSIS OF SUCCESSES IN BIOLOGICAL PEST CONTROL  I.  A thorough resume of
  biological control efforts and successes may be found in Clausen (1978).  Another publication released in       1999 by the Academic
  Press, San Diego, CA that discusses in great detail some of the outstanding
  contributions to pest control       employing the
  biological control method.   II.  The so-called Island
  Theory seems to be borne out in thee results, because a substantial portion
  of the more striking successes        in biological
  control have occurred on such islands as Hawaii, Fiji and Mauritius, and
  ecological islands such as portions of        California.        A.  One reason is that biological control work
  began early in such places, and a disproportionate amount of research and             importation was
  undertaken there in comparison to continents (excepting California).                                           B. 
  The present record shows that about 60% of all the complete successes
  have occurred on continents; thus, the 
  island                                    theory is no longer
  fully acceptable.   III.  Parasitoids have
  been argued to be better than predators as biological control agents.                           A.  Because a predaceous larva consumes many
  host individuals during its lifetime and a parasitoid but one host, it might                              appear that a
  predator is inherently more destructive and thus makes a better biological
  control agent.         B.  However, analysis of the 139 species of
  entomophagous insects imported and established in the United States as of
  1967              showed that
  113 were parasitoids and 26 predators. 
  This ratio has remained similar into the 1990's.  Roughly twice as many              successes in
  biological control have resulted from parasitoid introduction in the United States.  However, about four times              as many on the
  world scene.                         C.  The apparent superiority of parasitoids is
  the subject of contemporary debate and research.  This may only reflect the fact                               that
  parasitoids have received the greatest amount of attention in terms of the
  number of species introduced and the                               number
  subjected to field analyses.   IV.  Multiple versus
  "The Best" Species.          A.  The question has arisen whether multiple
  importation of different natural enemy species attacking a given host and
  the                 resulting
  interspecific competition among them produces a greater or lesser total host
  mortality than would be the               importation
  of the so-called "best" species allowed to act alone.          B.  Analysis of past successes suggests that
  multiple species importation, whether made simultaneously or sequentially,
  have                nearly
  always resulted in enhanced biological control.                1.  multiple introductions provide a series of
  natural enemies that can attack a sequence of host stages in any one
  habitat.                     Here
  environmental changes may adversely affect one natural enemy yetfavor
  another, so that the latter natural enemy                    may tend
  to compensate for the reduced efficiency of the former.  Howard and Fiske made these points the
  basis of their                    
  so-called sequence theory of multiple importations.               
  2.  when several natural enemy
  species are established on a common host, they are more likely to parasitize
  that host over a                     greater geographic range than a single species
  of natural enemy.                3. 
  multiple introductions increase the chances of obtaining a species of
  natural enemy that can use alternate hosts to                    overcome difficulties associated with seasonal
  fluctuation in pest abundance.                               
  4.  multiple importations favor
  the chance of establishing a truly superior species of natural enemy.   V.  Clausen's
  3-Host Generation / 3-year Rule.   A good exception is provided by the
  mymarid egg parasitoid, Patasson
  nitens imported from
  Australia into South Africa in 1926. 
  Complete biological control of the eucalyptus weevil was achieved
  within the required three years in southern and southeastern parts of the
  country.  However, in the northeastern
  highlands where conditions were less favorable to both host and parasitoid,
  several additional years were required for the parasitoid to bring about
  substantial control of the eucalyptus weevil.  This example also nullifies the generalization that egg
  parasitoids alone would not prove capable of biological control.     VI.  Single
  Larval Parasitoid Importations.   A good example of a single larval
  parasitoid working successful biological control is the tachinid, Ptychomyia remota, introduced into Fiji from Malaya in 1925, which
  resulted in the complete control of the coconut moth.  This also illustrates a case where an area
  other than the native home of a pest produced a useful biological control
  agent, since Ptychomyia's
  natural host in Malaya was a related, but innocuous species of native moth.   VII.  Single
  Pupal Parasitoid.   The imported cabbage worm
  controlled in New Zealand by Pteromalus
  puparum introduced from
  North America in 1933.   VIII.  Other
  Generalizations.   Such generalizations as biological
  control being more likely to succeed against pests of perennial rather than
  short-lived annuals, against sessile or nonmotile pests, or against alien
  rather than native pests, must also be qualified.  As with any generalization, there are exceptions to the rule.  Analyses of the results of past efforts
  can provide useful guidelines.     IX.  It will probably
  continue to hold that the number of successes attained in biological control
  in any one country is directly           proportional to
  the amount of research and importation work carried out there   Hawaii, California, the rest of the
  United States, New Zealand and Australia, as well as the former Commonwealth
  Institute of Biological Control, currently lead in the number of cases of
  successful biological control of insect pests and weeds brought about by imported
  natural enemies.  This reflects the
  proportionately greater amount of biological control programs instituted by
  each of those countries where early impetus was provided by the
  proportionately greater losses that those countries have suffered from introduced
  pests.   X. 
  There are of course many other countries reporting successful cases of
  biological control.  Many of these are
  represented by only one or two successes that resulted largely
  from trans-shipments of biological
  control agents of proven value following their initial  successful employment in other
  countries.  Four insect pests that
  have been controlled in this manner in various countries are:                             A.  Cottony-cushion scale controlled by the Rodolia (Vedalia) beetle in 55 countries
  following its initial success in California.                           B.  Woolly apple aphid controlled by Aphelinus mali in 42 of 51 countries into which it was introduced
  following its initial                                
  success in New Zealand.                           C.  White peach scale controlled by Prospaltella berlesei in 5 countries
  following its initial success in Italy.                           D.  Citrus blackfly controlled by Eretomocerus serius in 9 countries following
  its initial success in Cuba.     XI.  Pest Groups.           
  A.  Further analysis reveals
  that 55% of the 107 pest species brought under some measure of biological
  control through 1960                 
  belong to the Homoptera, nearly 40% of which are scale insects.                           
  B.  20% of the pests are
  Lepidoptera.                           
  C.  17% are Coleoptera.                           
  D.  8% belong to other taxa.     XII.  Natural Enemy Groups.                            
  A.  Since a majority of successes
  have involved coccids, it follows that a large proportion of the natural
  enemies involved in  biological control success have
  been natural enemies of scale insects: 
  Hymenoptera-- Encyrtidae & Aphelinidae Coleoptera-- Coccinellidae                             B. 
  This grouping will probably change as more emphasis is given to
  nonhomopterous pests.                            
  C.  For weed control,
  Homoptera-Hemiptera, Thysanoptera, Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Diptera and
  Hymenoptera.                   XIII.  It is suggested that biological weed
  control has registered a proportionately greater measure of success than
  biological                             control of insect
  pests.              
  A.  Only during the last few
  years has the method been used against weeds other than those infesting
  relatively stable,                    undisturbed rangelands.              
  B.  Weeds engage in intense
  competition for space, water and nutrients with other plants, and the
  competitive advantage of                     these other plants may be strongly favored by further
  additional insect injury to the
  weeds.                                
  C.  Plant injury by
  weed-feeding insects may be attended and intensified by the action of plant
  pathogens.                               
  D.  The work has been
  necessarily restricted to promising prospective biological control agents.                                E.  Unlike insect hosts, plants do not always
  die from the attack of a single insect. 
  The greater numbers of natural enemies                                     that are thus generated at low
  host densities makes for a greater searching effectiveness on the part of
  biological weed                                     control
  agents     REFERENCES:   Bellows, T. & T. W.
  Fisher (eds.).  1999.  Principles and Application of Biological
  Control.  Academic Press, San Diego
  CA.  1046 p.   Clausen, C. P. (ed.).  1978. 
  Introduced Parasites and Predators of Arthropod Pests and Weeds:  A World Review.  U. S. Dept. Agric., Agric. Handbk. No. 480., Washington, D.
  C.  545 p.     |