23 results on '"Lövei, Gabor L"'
Search Results
2. Spatiotemporal distancing of crops reduces pest pressure while maintaining conservation biocontrol in oilseed rape.
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Sulg, Silva, Kovács, Gabriella, Willow, Jonathan, Kaasik, Riina, Smagghe, Guy, Lövei, Gabor L, and Veromann, Eve
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RAPESEED ,AGRICULTURAL pests ,PEST control ,AGRICULTURE ,INTEGRATED pest control ,OILSEEDS ,ARTHROPOD pests - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Agricultural landscapes provide resources for arthropod pests as well as their natural enemies. To develop integrated pest management (IPM) practices, it is important to understand how spatiotemporal location influences crop colonization and damage severity. We performed a 3‐year (2016–2018) field experiment in winter oilseed rape (OSR, Brassica napus) fields in Estonia, where half of the fields were within 500 m of the location of the previous year's winter OSR field and half were outside this zone. We investigated how distance from the previous year's OSR crop influences the infestation and parasitism rates of two of its most important pests: the pollen beetle (Brassicogethes aeneus) and the cabbage seed weevil (Ceutorhynchus obstrictus). RESULTS: When the distance from the previous year's OSR crop was >500 m, we recorded significantly reduced pest pressure by both B. aeneus and C. obstrictus in the study fields. Biocontrol of both pests, provided by parasitic wasps, was high in each study year and commonly not affected by distance. Mean parasitism rates of B. aeneus were >31%, occasionally reaching >70%; for C. obstrictus, mean parasitism was >46%, reaching up to 79%, thereby providing effective biocontrol for both pest species. CONCLUSION: Spatiotemporal separation of OSR fields can reduce pest pressure without resulting in reduced parasitism of OSR pests. This supports a spatiotemporal field separation concept as an effective and sustainable technique for IPM in OSR. © 2023 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Analysing the distribution of strictly protected areas toward the EU2030 target.
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Cazzolla Gatti, Roberto, Zannini, Piero, Piovesan, Gianluca, Alessi, Nicola, Basset, Alberto, Beierkuhnlein, Carl, Di Musciano, Michele, Field, Richard, Halley, John M., Hoffmann, Samuel, Iaria, Jacopo, Kallimanis, Athanasios, Lövei, Gabor L., Morera, Albert, Provenzale, Antonello, Rocchini, Duccio, Vetaas, Ole R., and Chiarucci, Alessandro
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PROTECTED areas ,EXTERNALITIES ,LAND use ,VALUE (Economics) ,STRATEGIC planning - Abstract
Protecting global biodiversity is one of the most urgent tasks for the coming decades. Area-based conservation is a pillar for preserving ecosystems and species. Strictly protected areas specifically preserve biodiversity and ecosystem processes. The "EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030" targets strict protection for 10% of land area. Here we performed the first analysis of strictly protected areas (as IUCN type Ia, Ib, and II) across Europe, by investigating their area coverage at the level of biogeographical regions, countries and elevation gradients. We show that, with few exceptions, the amount of strictly protected area is very limited and the spatial distribution of such protected areas is biased towards higher elevation sites, as in the case of other protected areas. Then, we suggest that potential areas should be identified to expand strictly protected areas with low economic and social costs including, for instance, areas with high biodiversity value, low population, and low productive land use. Finally, we propose that a coordinated effort and a strategic plan to achieve continental-scale conservation are fundamental, and at least half of this land under strict conservation (i.e. 5%) should be under the protection categories Ia and Ib. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Flowering Coriander (Coriandrum sativum) Strips Do Not Enhance Ecosystem Services in Azorean Orchards.
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Ferrante, Marco, Lövei, Gabor L., Lavigne, Lambert, Vicente, Mario Caballero, Tarantino, Elisa, Lopes, David Horta, Monjardino, Paulo, and Borges, Paulo A. V.
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ECOSYSTEM services ,WHEAT seeds ,WEED seeds ,FARM management ,WEEDS ,FLOWERS ,CORIANDER ,ORCHARDS - Abstract
Simple Summary: Ecosystem services (ESs) and disservices (EDs) are routinely estimated from changes in service provider densities without measuring their actual levels. By using the sentinel approach (i.e., exposing a plant, seeds, and prey models in a standardized way), we tested how coriander (Coriandrum sativum) strips planted in mixed orchards on Terceira Island (Azores, Portugal) affected ESs/EDs via herbivory on lettuce plants, seed predation on wheat and weed seeds, and predation on artificial caterpillars. Vertebrates had more influence than invertebrates on ESs and EDs. Herbivory (ED) after 2 weeks was similar in the coriander and the control plots, while seed predation was higher in the control than in the coriander plots on both wheat grain (an ED: 30.8% vs. 15.3%) and weed seeds (an ES: 2.5% vs. 0.4%). Vertebrate predation (ES) rates after 48 h were significantly higher in the control (9%) than in the coriander plots (3%), while no difference was observed for invertebrate predation. Coriander strips did not support increased ES/reduced ED levels in this habitat. The sentinel approach is effective to quantitatively compare multiple ESs/EDs under different farming management strategies. The effect of flower strips on ecosystem services (ESs) and disservices (EDs) is routinely assessed following changes in service provider densities without measuring the associated levels of ES/EDs. By using the sentinel approach (i.e., exposing a plant, seeds, and prey models in a standardized way), we tested how coriander (Coriandrum sativum) strips planted in mixed orchards on Terceira Island (Azores, Portugal) affected herbivory on lettuce plants, seed predation on wheat and weed seeds, and predation on artificial caterpillars. Vertebrates had more influence than invertebrates on ESs/EDs. Herbivory (ED) after 2 weeks was similar in the coriander and the control plots (mean ± SD; 2.3% ± 3.3% vs. 2.2% ± 2.9%, n = 32 for both). Seed predation was higher in the control than in the coriander plots for both grain (ED; 30.8% ± 38.9% vs. 15.3% ± 10.8%, n = 18 for both) and weed seeds (ES; 2.5% ± 4.1% vs. 0.4% ± 0.5%, n = 18 for both). Vertebrate predation (ES) rates after 48 h were significantly higher in the control (estimate 9%, 95% CI: 4–20%) than in the coriander plots (3%, 1–8%), while no difference was observed for invertebrate predation. Coriander strips did not support increased ES/reduced ED levels in this setting. The tools used can be effective to quantitatively compare multiple ESs/EDs under different farming management strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Correction to: Analysing the distribution of strictly protected areas toward the EU2030 target.
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Cazzolla Gatti, Roberto, Zannini, Piero, Piovesan, Gianluca, Alessi, Nicola, Basset, Alberto, Beierkuhnlein, Carl, Di Musciano, Michele, Field, Richard, Halley, John M., Hoffmann, Samuel, Iaria, Jacopo, Kallimanis, Athanasios, Lövei, Gabor L., Morera, Albert, Provenzale, Antonello, Rocchini, Duccio, Vetaas, Ole R., and Chiarucci, Alessandro
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PROTECTED areas - Abstract
Cumulative area under protection (%) for each country is shown for all strictly protected areas in the upper panel and for the 3 different IUCN categories (Ia, Ib, and II) in the lower panels The original article has been corrected. Cumulative area under protection (%) for each biogeographical region is shown for all strictly protected areas in the upper panel and for the 3 different IUCN categories (Ia, Ib, and II) in the lower panels Graph: Fig. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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6. Monitoring Arthropods in Azorean Agroecosystems: the project AGRO-ECOSERVICES.
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Borges, Paulo A. V., Nunes, Rui, Lamelas-López, Lucas, Pereira, Enésima, Costa, Ricardo, Monjardino, Paulo, Lopes, David H., Soares, António Onofre, Gil, Artur, Rigal, François, Ferrante, Marco, and Lövei, Gabor L.
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ARTHROPODA ,AGRICULTURAL ecology ,POLLINATION ,ORCHARDS ,ARTHROPOD diversity - Abstract
Background The data we present are part of the AGRO-ECOSERVICES project (Assessing ecosystem services and disservices provided by arthropod species in Azorean agroecosystems). The project aims to evaluate the relative importance of native and non-native organisms as ecosystem services (ES) and disservices (ED) providers, by combining novel, direct and quantitative tools for monitoring agro-biodiversity. Ecosystem services include evaluation of natural pest control by predation, seed predation on weed plants, pollination, decomposition and ecosystem disservices, herbivory and seed predation on crop plants. Active Aerial Searching (AAS) (only in maize-fields) and pitfall traps were used to sample the arthropod biodiversity (predatory spiders, true-bugs and beetles and main insect pests) on four agricultural habitats of Terceira Island, namely citrus orchards, low and high elevation maize fields and vineyards. New information We provided an inventory of all arthropods recorded in four Azorean agroecosystems (citrus orchards, low and high elevation maize fields and vineyards) from Terceira Island. A total of 50412 specimens were collected, belonging to four classes, 20 orders, 81 families and 200 identified species of arthropods. A total of 127 species are considered introduced (n = 22646) and 69 native non-endemic (n = 24117). Four endemic species were recorded with very few specimens (n = 14) and 3635 specimens belong to unidentified taxa recorded only at genus or family level. Five species are new records for Terceira Island, with Lagria hirta (Linnaeus, 1758) (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae) being also a new record for the Azores. This publication contributes to a better knowledge of the arthropods communities present in agro-ecosystems of Terceira Island and will serve as a baseline for future monitoring schemes targeting the long-term change in arthropod diversity and abundance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Targeting a coatomer protein complex-I gene via RNA interference results in effective lethality in the pollen beetle Brassicogethes aeneus.
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Willow, Jonathan, Sulg, Silva, Taning, Clauvis Nji Tizi, Silva, Ana Isabel, Christiaens, Olivier, Kaasik, Riina, Prentice, Katterinne, Lövei, Gabor L., Smagghe, Guy, and Veromann, Eve
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POLLEN ,AGRICULTURAL pests ,RNA ,BEETLES ,RNA interference ,RAPESEED ,OILSEEDS ,RAPESEED oil - Abstract
The pollen beetle Brassicogethes aeneus is a serious pest of oilseed rape (Brassica napus) in Europe. Management of this pest has grown difficult due to B. aeneus's development of resistance to pyrethroid insecticides, as well as the pressure to establish control strategies that minimise the impact on nontarget organisms. RNA interference represents a nucleotide sequence-based, and thus potentially species-specific, approach to agricultural pest control. The present study examined the efficacy of targeting the coatomer gene coatomer subunit alpha (αCOP), via both microinjection and dietary exposure to exogenous complementary dsRNA, on αCOP-silencing and subsequent mortality in B. aeneus. Beetles injected with dsRNA targeting αCOP (at 0.14 µg/mg) showed 88% and 100% mortality at 6 and 10 days post-injection, respectively; where by the same time after dietary exposure, 43%–89% mortality was observed in the 3 µg dsRNA/µL treatment, though the effect was concentration-dependent. Thus, the effect was significant for both delivery routes. In working towards RNA-based management of B. aeneus, future studies should include αCOP as a target of interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. Integrating adverse effect analysis into environmental risk assessment for exotic generalist arthropod biological control agents: a three-tiered framework.
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Paula, Débora P., Andow, David A., Barratt, Barbara I. P., Pfannenstiel, Robert S., Gerard, Philippa J., Todd, Jacqui H., Zaviezo, Tania, Luna, Maria G., Cédola, Claudia V., Loomans, Antoon J. M., Howe, Andy G., Day, Michael D., Ehlers, Clark, Green, Chris, Arpaia, Salvatore, Yano, Eizi, Lövei, Gabor L., Hinomoto, Norihide, Fontes, Eliana M. G., and Pires, Carmen S. S.
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Environmental risk assessments (ERAs) are required before utilizing exotic arthropods for biological control (BC). Present ERAs focus on exposure analysis (host/prey range) and have resulted in approval of many specialist exotic biological control agents (BCA). In comparison to specialists, generalist arthropod BCAs (GABCAs) have been considered inherently risky and less used in classical biological control. To safely consider exotic GABCAs, an ERA must include methods for the analysis of potential effects. A panel of 47 experts from 14 countries discussed, in six online forums over 12 months, scientific criteria for an ERA for exotic GABCAs. Using four case studies, a three-tiered ERA comprising Scoping, Screening and Definitive Assessments was developed. The ERA is primarily based on expert consultation, with decision processes in each tier that lead to the approval of the petition or the subsequent tier. In the Scoping Assessment, likelihood of establishment (for augmentative BC), and potential effect(s) are qualitatively assessed. If risks are identified, the Screening Assessment is conducted, in which 19 categories of effects (adverse and beneficial) are quantified. If a risk exceeds the proposed risk threshold in any of these categories, the analysis moves to the Definitive Assessment to identify potential non-target species in the respective category(ies). When at least one potential non-target species is at significant risk, long-term and indirect ecosystem risks must be quantified with actual data or the petition for release can be dismissed or withdrawn. The proposed ERA should contribute to the development of safe pathways for the use of low risk GABCAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. The potential of trap and barrier cropping to decrease densities of the whitefly Bemisia tabaci MED on cotton in China.
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Zhang, Xiao‐Ming, Lövei, Gabor L, Ferrante, Marco, Yang, Nian‐Wan, and Wan, Fang‐Hao
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SWEETPOTATO whitefly ,INSECT pests ,ALEYRODIDAE ,COTTON ,MUSKMELON ,INTERCROPPING ,COTTON growing - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The whitefly, Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) MED, is a destructive insect pest in many countries of the world. Although the use of insecticides for controlling B. tabaci has been effective to a certain extent, pesticides are not an acceptable long‐term control method, and alternatives should be sought. This paper focuses on the possibility of controlling B. tabaci on cotton using trap and barrier crops. We performed field experiments using cantaloupe (Cucumis melo) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus) as trap crops, and maize (Zea mays) as a barrier crop in various configurations in Hebei Province, North China. RESULTS: The main activity periods were shortest on cantaloupe and ranged between 16–32 days for immatures and 14–33 days for adults. Adult whitefly densities were not significantly reduced by any treatment. During the main activity period, maize intercropping reduced densities of immature whiteflies from 24.2 individuals (ind.) 100 cm−2 to 4.0 ind.100 cm−2, but all treatments were successful in significantly reducing immature B. tabaci densities. This resulted in a significant yield premium. CONCLUSIONS: Intercropping reduced B. tabaci densities on cotton more than perimeter planting. Maize was more effective to reduce densities of immature whiteflies on cotton than cantaloupe. The results will contribute to the development of more effective and practical approaches for protecting cotton from B. tabaci and lowering chemical pressure on this crop. © 2019 Society of Chemical Industry [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. The effect of urbanization on the functional and scale-sensitive diversity of bird assemblages in Central India.
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Kale, Manoj, Dudhe, Nandkishor, Ferrante, Marco, Ivanova, Tatiana, Kasambe, Raju, Trukhanova, Irina S., Bhattacharya, Prosun, and Lövei, Gabor L.
- Abstract
Diversity changes can be evaluated at various spatial scales, and the relationship between changes in diversity at the local, landscape and regional scales is not evident. The overall patterns of functional and beta diversity of bird assemblages were evaluated along a five-stage urbanization gradient, censused over the months of January to April in the years 2010–2013, in and around Amravati city, Deccan Plateau, Central India. We expected the abundance of large and predatory species to decline along the gradient, and urbanization to homogenize species richness at the landscape level. Overall, 112,829 birds belonging to 89 species were identified in the region, and species richness decreased from the rural forest (73 species) to more urbanized areas (lowest at the centre of Amravaty city with 29 species). Along the urbanization gradient, bird assemblages contained more small species, and the share of frugivorous and omnivorous species also increased, while that of insectivorous species decreased. Diversity partitioning indicated that of the overall pattern, local (alpha) diversity accounted for 50.1% of the total (gamma) diversity, and urbanization stages another 36.2%; the contribution of within-stage, local diversity was rather small (2.7%), indicating fairly homogeneous assemblages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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11. Nestedness of bird assemblages along an urbanisation gradient in Central India.
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Kale, Manoj, Ferrante, Marco, Dudhe, Nandkishor, Kasambe, Raju, Trukhanova, Irina S, Ivanova, Tatiana, Bhattacharya, Prosun, and Lövei, Gabor L
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URBANIZATION ,BIRD diversity ,URBAN biodiversity - Abstract
We censused terrestrial bird assemblages along a five-stage urbanisation gradient (rural forest, industrial zone, peri-urban, suburban and urban habitats) in and around Amravati City, Central India, between January and April 2010–2013. A total of 89 species of birds were recorded, with the highest detected species richness in the rural areas (67 species) and the lowest in the urban one (29 species). The rural habitats had the highest diversity, followed, in a decreasing order, by industrial, peri-urban, suburban and urban areas, supporting Gray's increasing disturbance rather than Connell's intermediate disturbance hypothesis. The densities were, however, highest in the urban habitats, supporting the resource concentration hypothesis. The assemblages were significantly nested, indicating a common origin from the rural forest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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12. Ground beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) diversity is higher in narrow hedges composed of a native compared to non-native trees in a Danish agricultural landscape.
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Lövei, Gabor L., Magura, Tibor, Stewart, Alan, and Bolger, Thomas
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GROUND beetles ,HEDGES (Plants) ,INSECT diversity ,BEETLES ,BIODIVERSITY ,ECOLOGY ,GRASSLANDS - Abstract
Non-cultivated areas in agricultural landscapes can substantially contribute to biodiversity. Therefore, to examine the role of tree-line hedges in supporting arthropod diversity in an agricultural landscape, we sampled carabid beetles in three replicates of a native deciduous (hawthorn, Crataegus mono-gyna), a non-native deciduous (rowan, Sorbus intermedia), and a non-native coniferous (spruce, Picea spp.) hedge in Jytland, Denmark., We hypothesised that hedgerows with deciduous trees harbour more diverse carabid assemblages than hedges composed of non-native trees., The number of carabid individuals and species was highest in the hawthorn hedges and significantly lower in rowan and spruce. This was caused by the presence of forest specialist species. Differences in the number of the grassland and the cropland specialist ground beetle individuals and species were not statistically significant among the hedges., Litter depth and the density of herbs and grasses negatively, while hedge width positively influenced carabid diversity., Overall, hedges composed of the native, deciduous hawthorn were superior to ones composed of the non-native rowan, and especially to coniferous ones to conserve and maintain carabid diversity in this cultivated Danish landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. Shifting Preference between Oviposition vs. Host-Feeding under Changing Host Densities in Two Aphelinid Parasitoids.
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Nian-Wan Yang, Lu-Lu Ji, Lövei, Gabor L., and Fang-Hao Wan
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OVIPARITY ,PARASITOIDS ,LIFE history theory ,DENSITY ,SWEETPOTATO whitefly ,NYMPHS (Insects) - Abstract
Destructive host-feeding is common in hymenopteran parasitoids. Such feeding may be restricted to host stages not preferred for oviposition. However, whether this is a fixed strategy or can vary according to resource levels or parasitoid needs is less clear. We tested the trade-off between host feeding and oviposition on two whitefly parasitoids under varying host densities. Females of two aphelinid parasitoids, Eretmocerus hayati and Encarsia sophia were exposed to nine different densities of their whitefly host, Bemisia tabaci, in single-instar tests to identify their functional response. Mixed-instar host choice tests were also conducted by exposing whiteflies at four densities to the parasitoids. We hypothesized that the parasitoid females can detect different host densities, and decide on oviposition vs. host-feeding accordingly. The results showed that both Er. hayati and En. sophia females tended to increase both oviposition and host-feeding with increased host density within a certain range. Oviposition reached a plateau at lower host density than host-feeding in Er. hayati, while En. sophia reached its oviposition plateau at higher densities. At low densities, Er. hayati parasitized most on first and second (the optimal ones), and fed most on third nymphal instars (the suboptimal one) of the whitefly host as theory predicts, while at high densities, both parasitism and host-feeding occurred on first and second instars which are preferred for oviposition. En. sophia parasitized most on third and fourth (the optimal ones), while fed on first instars (the suboptimal one) at low densities, and utilized third and fourth instars for both at high densities. In conclusion, oviposition vs. host-feeding strategy of parasitoid females was found to vary at different host densities. The balance between reserving optimal hosts for oviposition or using them for host-feeding depended on parasitoid life history and the availability of host resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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14. Cry Toxins and Proteinase Inhibitors in Transgenic Plants Do Have Non-Zero Effects on Natural Enemies in the Laboratory: Rebuttal to Shelton et al. 2009.
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Andow, David A., Lövei, Gabor L., and Arpaia, Salvatore
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LETTERS to the editor ,META-analysis - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Setting the record straight: a rebuttal to an erroneous analysis on transgenic insecticidal crops and natural enemies," by A. M. Shelton and colleagues in a 2009 issue.
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- 2009
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15. Dummy caterpillars as a simple method to assess predation rates on invertebrates in a tropical agroecosystem.
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Howe, Andrew, Lövei, Gabor L., and Nachman, Gösta
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PREDATION ,CATERPILLARS ,PREDATORY animals ,ANIMAL communities ,BIRDS - Abstract
The article discusses the use of artificial caterpillar to quantify the predation on invertebrates at a cotton field in Uganda. It presents an overview of the description of the technique and illustration on how it assessed the predation rate. It notes that the artificial caterpillar was attacked by several predators which include birds and small rodent. Results imply that predation rates in agroecosystem is possibly comparable to predation levels in tropical forest habitat.
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- 2009
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16. Transgenic Insecticidal Crops and Natural Enemies: A Detailed Review of Laboratory Studies.
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Lövei, Gabor L., Andow, David A., and Arpaja, Salvatore
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TRANSGENIC plants ,ARTHROPOD pests ,EXPERIMENTS ,INSECTICIDAL plants ,PROTEINASES ,ENZYME inhibitors ,BIOSAFETY ,META-analysis ,PARASITOIDS - Abstract
This review uses a data-driven, quantitative method to summarize the published, peer-reviewed literature about the impact of genetically modified (GM) plants on arthropod natural enemies in laboratory experiments. The method is similar to meta-analysis, and, in contrast to a simple author-vote counting method used by several earlier reviews, gives an objective, data-driven summary of existing knowledge about these effects. Significantly more non-neutral responses were observed than expected at random in 75% of the comparisons of natural enemy groups and response classes. These observations indicate that Cry toxins and proteinase inhibitors often have non-neutral effects on natural enemies. This synthesis identifies a continued bias toward studies on a few predator species, especially the green lacewing, Chrysoperla carnea Stephens, which may be more sensitive to GM insecticidal plants (16.8% of the quantified parameter responses were significantly negative) than predators in general (10.9% significantly negative effects without C. carnea). Parasitoids were more susceptible than predators to the effects of both Cry toxins and proteinase inhibitors, with fewer positive effects (18.0%, significant and nonsignificant positive effects combined) than negative ones (66.1%, significant and nonsignificant negative effects combined). GM plants can have a positive effect on natural enemies (4.8% of responses were significantly positive), although significant negative (21.2%) effects were more common. Although there are data on 48 natural enemy species, the database is still far from adequate to predict the effect of a Bt toxin or proteinase inhibitor on natural enemies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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17. Publisher Correction to: Integrating adverse effect analysis into environmental risk assessment for exotic generalist arthropod biological control agents: a three-tiered framework.
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Paula, Débora P., Andow, David A., Barratt, Barbara I. P., Pfannenstiel, Robert S., Gerard, Philippa J., Todd, Jacqui H., Zaviezo, Tania, Luna, Maria G., Cédola, Claudia V., Loomans, Antoon J. M., Howe, Andy G., Day, Michael D., Ehlers, Clark, Green, Chris, Arpaia, Salvatore, Yano, Eizi, Lövei, Gabor L., Hinomoto, Norihide, Fontes, Eliana M. G., and Pires, Carmen S. S.
- Abstract
Due to typesetting errors, Table 5 was not displayed correctly in the initial online publication. The original online article has been corrected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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18. Ecosystem services and biodiversity in developing countries.
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Mertz, Ole, Ravnborg, Helle Munk, Lövei, Gabor L., Nielsen, Ivan, and Konijnendijk, Cecil C.
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BIODIVERSITY ,ECOLOGICAL economics ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,TRADITIONAL knowledge ,TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge ,DUNG beetles ,ECOSYSTEM health ,ECOSYSTEM management ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The concept of ecosystem services has become important for our understanding of the role of nature for maintaining human livelihoods. But is biodiversity essential to maintain ecosystem services? Many studies suggest that higher biodiversity allows a higher level of ecosystem services, but others argue that there is little hard evidence, especially from tropical environments, to document the necessity of high biodiversity for provision of most ecosystem services. Thus, effective valuation of biodiversity for ecosystem services and long-term studies and monitoring are needed to fully understand the complex biodiversity-ecosystem service interface. This introduction briefly reviews some of the main arguments in this debate and provides an overview of the other five special issue papers. Exploring biodiversity and ecosystem interactions in the context of the provision of ecosystem services, these papers address population and biodiversity coexistence, the importance of dung beetles in agricultural landscapes, the knowledge and use of palms by local communities, bioprospecting for drugs and how biodiversity conservation may have added benefits in terms of improved watershed functions and health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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19. Seasonal dynamics and reproductive phenology of ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) in fragments of native forest in the Manawatu, North Island, New Zealand.
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Cartellieri, Marc and Lövei, Gabor L.
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- 2003
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20. Ground Beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) in Forest Fragments of the Manawatu, New Zealand: Collapsed Assemblages?
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Lövei, Gabor L. and Cartellieri, Marc
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GROUND beetles ,BEETLES ,INSECTS ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Botanically diverse and well-maintained, protected forest fragments in the Manawatu area of the North Island of New Zealand contained very species-poor carabid assemblages. In a nearby large forest tract, the potential source area, nine species were caught in pitfall traps, while the largest forest remnant had two species, and a well-managed suburban forest patch had three species but only one with a potentially reproducing population. Lack of grazing and high botanical diversity was insufficient to maintain the potential carabid assemblage in these fragments. Predation risk and a low dispersal power in endemic New Zealand ground beetles, combined with fragment size and degree of isolation could contribute to this collapse. Active management of ground-active invertebrate species seems necessary to protect them in isolated forest fragments in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
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21. Predation Pressure in Tea (Camellia sinensis) Plantations in Southeastern China Measured by the Sentinel Prey Method.
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Imboma, Titus S., Gao, De-ping, You, Min-sheng, You, Shijun, and Lövei, Gabor L
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TEA ,TEA trade ,TEA growing ,PREDATION ,TEA plantations ,PESTICIDE residues in food ,PLANTATIONS ,FOREST plants - Abstract
Tea (Camellia sinensis) is an important food product with thousands of years of human use. Being a non-washable food, no pesticide residues are allowed, which increases the importance of natural means of plant protection. Predation, a component of natural pest control, is an important contributor to this, but its level and sustainability are not known in most of the areas of tea production. We quantified predation intensity using the artificial sentinel prey method in a tea-growing landscape containing remnants of the original forest vegetation in Fujian Province, China. The most common predators were chewing arthropods (49.8% of predation events) and birds (48.1%). Overall, predation rates at the edges of forest fragments (18.9% d
-1 ) were lower than either in fragment interiors (25.4%d−1 ) or in the surrounding tea plantations (19.2–24.1%d-1 ). Arthropod predation was higher inside, and at the edge of, forest fragments than within plantations, and generally decreased with increasing distance from a fragment edge, indicating limited spillover of arthropod predators from the native habitat remnants to the cultivated matrix at the local scale. Bird predation, though, showed a different trend: it was lower on the inside of forest fragments than in the tea planation, and bird attack rates increased at increasing distances (up to 40 m) from the forest fragment edge. We also found a reciprocal relationship between attack rates by birds and arthropods, suggesting intra-guild predation. Measures protecting arthropod natural enemies could increase the combined pest suppression effect, contributing to pesticide-free tea production in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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22. Book Review Access.
- Author
-
Lövei, Gabor L.
- Subjects
BOOK reviewing ,CONSERVATION biology ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
The article announces the availability of the journal's book reviews and the "Noted with Interest" column to readers.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Would You Start from Here?
- Author
-
Lövei, Gabor L.
- Subjects
NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the books "Gene Flow Between Crops and Their Wild Relatives," by M.S. Anderson and M. C. de Vicente, "Environmental Impact of Genetically Modified Crops," edited by N. Ferry and A.M.R. Gatehouse.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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