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.

Highlights

  • Ecosystem services (ESs) are based on natural ecological processes, whose outcomes are essential for human existence and well-being [1]

  • Our results provided mixed support for the above hypotheses: arthropod predation was higher inside forest fragments (H1 partially supported), even higher than at the edge (H2 not higher inside forest fragments (H1 partially supported), even higher than at the edge (H2 not supported), supported), and attack rates on sentinel prey decreased with increasing distances from the and attack rates on sentinel prey decreased with increasing distances from the forest edge forest edge (H3 supported)

  • Out of a total of 1300 dummy caterpillars glued onto tea canopies (400 each in Wuyi and Beifeng, 500 at Anxi), 283 caterpillars were found with predation marks

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ecosystem services (ESs) are based on natural ecological processes, whose outcomes are essential for human existence and well-being [1]. ESs are numerous, from the production of food to the psychological benefits derived from contact with living organisms, and are currently defined under the term “nature’s contribution to people” [2]. There is increased focus on ESs because humankind increasingly depends on them, they cannot be replaced by technology, and in many places of the world, they are under stress, showing signs of damage [3]. One of the benefits of natural pest control is the reduction of the densities of organisms considered pests of various crop plants. There are several ecological interactions whose outcome is natural pest control, but predation is undoubtedly an important one among them [4]. There are various means to Insects 2020, 11, 212; doi:10.3390/insects11040212 www.mdpi.com/journal/insects

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call