A total system approach to sustainable pest management
- 11 November 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 94 (23) , 12243-12248
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.94.23.12243
Abstract
A fundamental shift to a total system approach for crop protection is urgently needed to resolve escalating economic and environmental consequences of combating agricultural pests. Pest management strategies have long been dominated by quests for “silver bullet” products to control pest outbreaks. However, managing undesired variables in ecosystems is similar to that for other systems, including the human body and social orders. Experience in these fields substantiates the fact that therapeutic interventions into any system are effective only for short term relief because these externalities are soon “neutralized” by countermoves within the system. Long term resolutions can be achieved only by restructuring and managing these systems in ways that maximize the array of “built-in” preventive strengths, with therapeutic tactics serving strictly as backups to these natural regulators. To date, we have failed to incorporate this basic principle into the mainstream of pest management science and continue to regress into a foot race with nature. In this report, we establish why a total system approach is essential as the guiding premise of pest management and provide arguments as to how earlier attempts for change and current mainstream initiatives generally fail to follow this principle. We then draw on emerging knowledge about multitrophic level interactions and other specific findings about management of ecosystems to propose a pivotal redirection of pest management strategies that would honor this principle and, thus, be sustainable. Finally, we discuss the potential immense benefits of such a central shift in pest management philosophy.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- From Homo economicus to Homo ecologicus: towards environmentally safe pest controlPublished by Springer Nature ,1997
- Monogamy and the Prairie VoleScientific American, 1993
- How Parasitic Wasps Find their HostsScientific American, 1993
- Oligosaccharide Signals in Plants: A Current AssessmentAnnual Review of Plant Biology, 1991
- Use of learned odours by a parasitic wasp in accordance with host and food needsNature, 1990
- Exploitation of Herbivore-Induced Plant Odors by Host-Seeking Parasitic WaspsScience, 1990
- Plant strategies of manipulating predatorprey interactions through allelochemicals: Prospects for application in pest controlJournal of Chemical Ecology, 1990
- Comparison of soil surface arthropod populations in conventional tillage, no-tillage and old field systemsAgro-Ecosystems, 1983
- Field confirmation of a mechanism causing synergism between Bacillus thuringiensis and the gypsy moth parasitoid, Apanteles melanoscelusJournal of Invertebrate Pathology, 1983
- The Integration of Chemical and Biological Control of Arthropod PestsAnnual Review of Entomology, 1962