Abstract

Biosecurity covers both long-term management of existing pests and the urgent government responses to alien invasive species which have yet to become fully established. Mating disruption, mass trapping and lure and kill systems all have potential to be used in pest management and against new incursions of certain types of organisms, predominantly moths and beetles. Straight chained lepidopteran sex pheromones have emerged as a source of potential market advantage in pest management, with trapping systems and residue-free multiple species disruption systems being increasingly adopted to reduce insecticide use and meet private stabndard. Semiochemicals can also offer new surveillance tools in pre-border biosecurity, greatly improving the chances for successful eradication of alien invasive species. However, a rising frequency of incursions of alien invasive species and consequent rise in official eradication programs due to globalisation points strongly to the need for further investment in the areas of discovery and development of surveillance and eradication technologies, from a sound knowledge of chemical ecology.

Highlights

  • ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTIONAchieve biosecurity, and generate market position with semiochemicals?

  • WHAT IS BIOSECURITY, AND HOW CAN CHEMICAL ECOLOGY CONTRIBUTE?Biosecurity is the discipline of responding to organism threats to natural and productive ecosystems at the national level

  • There are a number of terms and concepts involved in preborder biosecurity that differ from pest management

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Summary

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION

Achieve biosecurity, and generate market position with semiochemicals?. Reviewed by: Michel Renou, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, France Thomas Seth Davis, University of Idaho, USA. Biosecurity covers both long-term management of existing pests and the urgent government responses to alien invasive species which have yet to become fully established. Straight chained lepidopteran sex pheromones have emerged as a source of potential market advantage in pest management, with trapping systems and residue-free multiple species disruption systems being increasingly adopted to reduce insecticide use and meet private standards. Semiochemicals can offer new surveillance tools in pre-border biosecurity, greatly improving the chances for successful eradication of alien invasive species.

INTRODUCTION
Pest management and biosecurity with semiochemicals?
Likely eradication
CONCLUSIONS
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