학술논문

Potential and limits of 'assisted' push-pull strategies for the management of pests of staple food and horticultural crops in Sudano-Sahelian agroecosystems
Document Type
Electronic Resource
Author
Source
SEMIO-11 Workshop Abstracts, 12-15 November 2011, Nairobi, Kenya
Subject
H10 - Ravageurs des plantes
F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
conference_item
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
Conference
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Language
Abstract
The "push-pull" strategy is a stimulo-deterrent diversion technique whose principle consists in repelling the insect pest from the main crop using repellent ("push") crops and attracting it to the border of the cropped field using trap ("pull") plants. Conversely, some "push" plants may attract (via "pull" stimuli) natural enemies of pests in the crop/field. In these systems, pest and natural enemy behaviour is mediated by visual and semiochemical cues, some of the latter being produced during damage to plants by pests. The main example of successful implementation of "push-pull" principles is that of stem borer management by ICIPE and its partners in Eastern Africa. However, there are many limits to the generalization of such a pest management strategy. To extend the range of its application and delay potential dangers of dead-end trap plants on the long term, one should not rely on mere plant species diversity arrangement in agroecosystems, but mimick or re-inforce the processes at play, which results in "assisted" push-pull. We report such potential and limits of the push-pull principles, their application and their extensions, based on our experience in the context of Sudano-Sahelian staple-food and horticultural crop-based cropping systems of West Africa. For instance, a neem extract was assessed in Burkina Faso for potential repelling effects on vegetable fruit flies on zucchini, as a complement to "assisted" trap-cropping using spot-spraying with GF-120. Results on okra from Niger question the potential of spraying neem extract as complementary to trap-cropping with pigeon-pea, in a "food-web optimization" perspective. On the other hand, the potential of GF-120 for controlling both the monophagous Ziziphus fruit fly and polyphagous cucurbit fruitflies in a cropping system, via two radically opposite semiochemically-mediated pathways, is also highlighted. Results from earlier studies in Mali shed a new light on prospects for using some sorghum cultivars and ph