Abstract

AbstractOilseed rape can be used to produce biodiesel which can substitute non‐renewable fuels for transport. In the early 2000s, the EU introduced a series of policies and market‐based incentives to encourage the production of biofuels to meet their obligations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This led to a large increase in the area of oilseed rape grown across Europe with a simultaneous rise in insect pests which were largely controlled by synthetic insecticides. However, the withdrawal of neonicotinoid seed treatments in 2013 and the development of insecticide resistance in key insect pests led to crop failures and significant yield losses. Integrated Pest Management approaches could have prevented this pest problem; however, the lack of support and clear financial mechanisms for the enforcement of the 2009 Sustainable Use of Pesticides Directive meant that the cabbage stem flea beetle (CSFB; Psylliodes chrysocephala) has become a serious pest and the area of oilseed rape grown is now falling sharply leading to the need for imports. We suggest that it is imperative for Integrated Pest Management approaches to now become written into new EU and UK policies and to incentivise the development of tools required for implementation and use by farmers.

Highlights

  • Society currently faces a whole raft of global challenges to future, sustainable development (United Nations 2021)

  • In response to the problems associated with the loss of insect biodiversity (Sánchez-Bayo and Wyckhuy 2019; Wagner 2020), there was a need for the reduction in the use of neonicotinoid insecticides which have been linked to declines in insect, and pollinator diversity. These policies all impacted on the production methods for oilseed rape (OSR) (Brassica napus L.) and the way in which the insect pests of this crop can be managed within the European Union area

  • Perhaps less cited issue, related to the increased demand for biofuels is that the increase in the OSR area grown has led to an increased simplicity of the agricultural landscape and reduction in non-crop area (Strijker 2005; Ericsson et al 2009), providing higher availability of resources for insect pests and altering pest control ecosystem services

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Summary

Introduction

Society currently faces a whole raft of global challenges to future, sustainable development (United Nations 2021). The output can be accessed at: https://repository.rothamsted.ac.uk/item/9878v/howcontradictory-eu-policies-led-to-the-development-of-a-pest-the-story-of-oilseed-rapeand-the-cabbage-stem-flea-beetle.

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