Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-vpsfw Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-20T10:20:54.708Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Selective Control of Pest Damage

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

Bryan P. Beirne
Affiliation:
Research Institute, Research Branch, Canada Department of Agriculture, Belleville, Ontario

Abstract

The reason control measures are applied is to reduce the harm caused by pests. “Pests” is a subjective word that is arbitrarily used to refer to some of the living organisms that harm man and his property. Pest control measures may be classified on any of several bases, bur any one classification that uses several bases is liable to cause misunderstandings. Biological controls are the use by man of living organisms to control pest damage. Approaches to biological control are illustrated by results of work on four pests found in Ontario. These results also illustrate how insects may be interrelated through natural enemies that they have in common. As far as possible control measures should be selective for pests, or pest and other non-beneficial, species only. Biological controls tend to be relatively more selective than other, comparable, control measures. They are also the most feasible existing way of keeping pest damage down without continuing human intervention. Increasing attempts to erase pest problems, rather than to alleviate pest attacks temporarily, may result in increased Government participation in and regulation of pest control programmes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1964

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arthur, A. P. 1962a. Influence of host tree on abundance of Itoplectis conquisitor (Say) (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), a polyphagous parasite of the European pine shoot moth, Rhyacionia buoliana (Schiff.) (Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae). Canad. Ent. 94: 337347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arthur, A. P. 1962b. A skipper, Thymelicus lineola (Ochs.) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae) and its parasites in Ontario. Canad. Ent. 94: 10821089.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arthur, A. P., and Juillet, J. A.. 1961. The introduced parasites of the European pine shoot moth, Rhyacionia buoliana (Schiff.) Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae), with a critical evaluation of their usefulness as control agents. Canad. Ent. 93: 297312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beirne, B. P. 1963a. Procedures in biological control. Inform. Bull. Res. Inst. Belleville, No. 1, 6 pp.Google Scholar
Beirne, B. P. 1963b. The definition of “Biological Control”. Entomophaga (in press).Google Scholar
Bucher, G. E., and Arthur, A. P.. 1961. Disease in a field population of the introduced European skipper, Thymelicus lineola (Ochs.) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae). Canad. Ent. 93: 10481049.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gillies, H. T. 1962. Interspecific competition in mosquitoes—has it any bearing on biological control? Verh. XI int. Kongr. Ent. Wien (1960) 2: 502503.Google Scholar
Harris, P. 1960. Production of pine resin and its effect on survival of Rhyacionia buoliana (Schiff.) (Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae). Canad. J. Zool. 38: 121130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Juillet, J. A. 1960. Immature stages, life histories, and behaviour of two hymenopterous parasites of the European pine shoot moth, Rhyacionia buoliana (Schiff.) (Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae). Canad. Ent. 92: 342346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leius, K. 1960. Attractiveness of different foods and flowers to the adults of some hymenopterous parasites. Canad. Ent. 92: 369376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLeod, J. H., McGugan, B. M. and Coppel, H. C.. 1962. A review of the biological control attempts against insects and weeds in Canada. Tech. Commun. Commonw. Inst. biol. Control 2, 216 pp.Google Scholar
Metcalf, C. L., and Flint, W. P., res. Metcalf, R. L.. 1951. Destructive and useful insects. 3rd ed. McGraw Hill Book Co. Inc., New York.Google Scholar
Watson, W. Y., and Arthur, A. P.. 1959. Parasites of the European pine shoot moth, Rhyacionia buoliana (Schiff.) (Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae). Canad. Ent. 92: 342346.Google Scholar