Cover Page

Integrating Biological Control into Conservation Practice

 

EDITED BY

Roy G. Van Driesche

Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, USA

Daniel Simberloff

Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, USA

Bernd Blossey

Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, USA

Charlotte Causton

Charles Darwin Foundation, Galápagos, Ecuador

Mark S. Hoddle

Department of Entomology, University of California, USA

David L. Wagner

Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, USA

Christian O. Marks

The Nature Conservancy, Connecticut River Program, USA

Kevin M. Heinz

Department of Entomology, Texas A & M University, USA

Keith D. Warner

Center for Science, Technology, and Society, Santa Clara University, USA

 

 

logo.gif

List of contributors

Andersen, Jeremy C
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, & Management,
University of California, Berkeley, USA, jandersen@berkeley.edu

Blossey, Bernd
Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca,
New York, USA, bb22@cornell.edu

Causton, Charlotte
Charles Darwin Foundation, Puerta Ayora, Santa Cruz,
Galápagos Islands, Ecuador, CAUSTON@rockbug.net

Center, Ted D
USDA ARS Invasive Species Laboratory (retired),
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA, tdcenter@comcast.net

Duan, Jian J
USDA ARS Beneficial Insects Introduction Research Unit,
Newark, Delaware, USA, Jian.Duan@ARS.USDA.GOV

Fowler, Simon
Landcare Research, Manaaki Whenua, New Zealand,
FowlerS@landcareresearch.co.nz

Heinz, Kevin M
Department of Entomology, Texas A & M University,
College Station, TX, USA, kmheinz@tamu.edu

Hoddle, Mark S
Department of Entomology, University of California,
Riverside, California, USA, mark.hoddle@ucr.edu

Johnson, M. Tracy
USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station,
Institute of Pacific Islands Forestry, Volcano, Hawaii, USA,
tracyjohnson@fs.fed.us

Kaufman, Leyla
Department of Entomology, University of Hawaii, Manoa,
Hawaii, USA, leyla@hawaii.edu

Marks, Christian O
Connecticut River Program, The Nature Conservancy,
Northampton, MA, USA, cmarks@TNC.ORG

Messing, Russell H
Department of Entomology, University of Hawaii, Manoa,
Hawaii, USA, messing@hawaii.edu

Meyer, Jean-Yves
Délégation à la Recherche, Tahiti, French Polynesia,
yves.meyer@recherche.gov.pf

Montgomery, Michael E
Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service (retired),
Hamden, Connecticut, USA, michaelemontgomery@fs.fed.us

Pratt, Paul D
USDA ARS Invasive Species Laboratory, Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida, USA, Paul.Pratt@ARS.USDA.GOV

Purcell, Mary
USDA ARS Invasive Species Laboratory, Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida, USA, mpurcell@nifa.usda.gov

Rayamajhi, Min B
USDA ARS Invasive Species Laboratory, Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida, USA, Min.Rayamajhi@ARS.USDA.GOV

Sheppard, Andy W
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation (CSIRO), ACT, Australia, Andy.Sheppard@csiro.au

Simberloff, Daniel
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology,
University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, USA, tebo@utk.edu

Tipping, Phil W
USDA ARS Invasive Species Laboratory, Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida, USA, Philip.Tipping@ars.usda.gov

Van Driesche, Roy G
Department of Environmental Conservation,
University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, MA, USA, vandries@cns.umass.edu

van Klinken, Rieks
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation (CSIRO), Brisbane, Queensland, Australia,
Rieks.VanKlinken@csiro.au

Wagner, David L
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology,
University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, USA,
david.wagner@uconn.edu

Warner, Keith D
Center for Science, Technology, and Society,
Santa Clara University, California, USA,
kdwarner@gmail.com

Preface

The magnitude of threat posed to native ecosystem function and biodiversity by some invasive vertebrates, insects, pathogens, and plants is enormous and growing. At the landscape level, after damaging invaders are beyond eradication, a variety of habitats and ecosystems, on islands and continents, in all parts of the world may be affected and require some form of restoration. Biological control offers substantial opportunity to reduce the damage from invasive insects and plants, two of the most frequent and damaging groups of invasive species.

The purpose of this book is to address a nearly 25-year-old rift (from the seminal article by Howarth [1991]) that opened between conservation/restoration biologists and biological control scientists, particularly in the United States, so that in the future conservation biologists and biological control scientists might work together better to restore native ecosystems damaged by invasive species. The planning for this book originated in an informal meeting of conservation biologists, invasion biologists, and biological control scientists in October 2009, in Sunapee, New Hampshire, following a meeting that year on biological control for the protection of natural areas, held in Northampton, Massachusetts.

The tension between biological control and conservation biology had two causes. The first was that by the 1960s biological control agents introduced earlier to protect grazing or agricultural interests were found attacking native plants and insects in natural areas. More extensive search found other cases of such non-target impacts (Johnson and Stiling, 1996; Louda et al., 1997; Strong, 1997; Boettner et al., 2000; Kuris, 2003), tarnishing the use of biological control for a generation of conservation biologists and restoration ecologists. Any discussion of potential use of biological control agent to mitigate pest problems prompted the question: “What will it eat next if it controls the target?” This question is today routinely asked by undergraduates, graduate students, and the general public, but fails to recognize the dietary restrictions of many biological control agents. Mechanisms of population dynamics exist that cause insects with specialized diets, unlike vertebrates, to lose host-finding efficiency when the density of their prey or host plant declines, resulting in lower realized fecundity and a decrease in population size. Therefore, for specialized biological control agents, the answer to “what will they eat next” is “the same, just less of it as it becomes harder to find.” Others were concerned that agents would attack non-target species due to evolutionary expansion of their host ranges. However, while host shifts do frequently occur over evolutionary time (Stireman, 2005; Barrett and Heil, 2012), such changes have rarely been documented among insects introduced for biological control.

The second reason for the lack of understanding that developed between biological control and conservation/restoration scientists was research compartmentalization, with each group defining itself into its own sub-disciplines, attending different meetings and publishing in different journals. This is true both for conservation/restoration biologists (who publish in Conservation Biology, Restoration Ecology, Biological Invasions, etc.) and biological control scientists (BioControl, Biological Control, Biological Control Science and Technology, etc.). Opportunities to talk at length between these groups were, therefore, rare.

If invasive species were not one of the most important drivers of ecological degradation across natural ecosystems, the status quo could continue indefinitely. But they are and we must confront them as efficiently as possible. Conservation biologists should no longer leave a good tool unused and biological control scientists should no longer work in isolation from conservation biologists with special knowledge of the invaded ecosystems. The goal of this book is to discuss these issues in ways that make sense to both groups and find ways to work together better.

References

  1. Barrett, L. G. and M. Heil. 2012. Unifying concepts and mechanisms in the specificity of plant-enemy interactions. Trends in Plant Science 17: 282–292.
  2. Boettner, G. H., J. S. Elkinton, and C. J. Boettner. 2000. Effects of a biological control introduction on three nontarget native species of saturniid moths. Conservation Biology 14: 1798–1806.
  3. Howarth, F. G. 1991. Environmental impacts of classical biological control. Annual Review of Entomology 36: 485–509.
  4. Johnson, D. M. and P. D. Stiling. 1996. Host specificity of Cactoblastis cactorum (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), an exotic Opuntia-feeding moth, in Florida. Environmental Entomology 25: 743–748.
  5. Kuris, A. M. 2003. Did biological control cause extinction of the coconut moth, Levuana iridescens, in Fiji? Biological Invasions 5: 133–141.
  6. Louda, S. M., D. Kendall, J. Connor, and D. Simberloff. 1997. Ecological effects of an insect introduced for biological control of weeds. Science 277 (5329): 1088–1090.
  7. Stireman, J. O. 2005. The evolution of generalization? Parasitoid flies and the perils of inferring host range evolution from phylogenies. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 18: 325–336.
  8. Strong, D. R. 1997. Fear no weevil? Science (Washington) 277 (5329): 1058–1059.

CHAPTER 1
Integrating biological control into a conservation context: why is it necessary?

Kevin M. Heinz1, Roy G. Van Driesche2, and Daniel Simberloff3

1 Department of Entomology, Texas A & M University, USA

2 Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, USA

3 Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, USA

Potential problems if integration is lacking

The basic argument of this book is that, for pests of wildlands1, biological control should be one of the tools considered for use. Not to do so would lead to inadequate restoration for many pests because, while they might be controlled in small areas, they would remain uncontrolled over much of the landscape. We further argue that biological control will be done better if integrated into conservation biology because that will force greater consideration of the role of the invader as the true source, or not, of ecosystem degradation (see Chapter 2) and would incorporate into the control program more detailed knowledge of the invaded community’s ecology, which may exist best within the conservation biology community. Finally, we argue that biological control in areas of conservation importance can be done safely with modern methods of evaluation for assessing pest impact and natural enemy host range.

When conservation biologists seek to restore natural communities damaged by invasive species, if they give no thought to biological control, their efforts may be far less successful. Without biological control in the mix of potential tools, restoration efforts move toward eradication if possible, suppression over large areas by changing processes (e.g., fire, flood, or grazing regimes) at the landscape level if relevant, or suppressing the invader on small patches with chemical or mechanical tools if these methods work and money can be found for long-term management. Many invaders, however, cannot be eradicated if they are widespread, or their biology may not be appropriate to control over the long term with pesticides or mechanical tools. Similarly, while some plants or insects may have become highly invasive because people have altered historical landscape processes (MacDougall and Turkington, 2005), this factor surely does not account for the damage caused by some invaders. Certainly, it applies to few if any invasive insects: virtually none of the invasive insects that have so damaged North American forests (Campbell and Schlarbaum, 1994; Van Driesche and Reardon, 2014) could be said to have such factors driving their destructive effects. In contrast, some invasive plants quite likely are augmented in their densities by such forces, but clearly not all are. This leaves many highly damaging insects and plants for which restoration of ecological processes toward historical norms will not lead to restoration of the ecosystem. In such cases, then, restoration efforts are limited to saving fragments through intensive efforts at the preserve rather than the landscape level. While these efforts may protect rare species with small, threatened ranges, they do nothing to preserve average habitat conditions for the bulk of species across the broader landscape. Working with biological control scientists can sometimes provide a solution that can safely (if well conceived and executed) protect the landscape rather than just a few isolated preserves.

To succeed at biological control is not easy and requires cross-disciplinary collaborations to understand fully the implications of releasing natural enemies of the invader. If such collaborations with conservation biologists are lacking, decisions may be taken that undervalue certain native species, miss important ways in which these species are interacting, or fail to consider fully the potential impacts of the introduced biological control agents on the native ecosystem or what other forces may be at work driving ecosystem change. If biological control scientists work within a broader restoration team that includes conservation biologists, these potential pitfalls are more likely to be recognized and avoided.

Carrying out a biological control program typically requires a commitment to travel to the invader’s native range and determine what natural enemies affect the invader’s population dynamics there and which of these are plausibly sufficiently specialized that they might be safe for release in the invaded region. These demands require training in natural enemy biology and population dynamics, as well as knowledge of foreign cultures and geography. If the targeted invader is a plant, the biological control scientist must also have extensive understanding of plant taxonomy, physiology, and how both biotic and abiotic factors affect plant demography. If the invader is an insect, the practitioner must also be familiar with the taxonomy and biology of parasitoids or predators, how to rear them, and how they overcome host defenses. Training in these diverse subjects may leave little time to develop a deep appreciation for the community ecology and details of the particular ecosystems invaded by the pest. This leaves the biological control scientist vulnerable to making decisions that fail to take such information fully into account, and hence underscores the value of collaborative projects within a conservation biology framework, working with specialists on the ecology of the invaded communities.

Book organization

The practices of biological control and ecological restoration can be viewed as large-scale field experiments that unintentionally test many fundamental principles in ecology, as noted previously for both biological control (e.g., Hawkins and Cornell, 1999; Wajnberg et al., 2001; Roderick et al., 2012) and species conservation and habitat restoration (e.g., Young, 2000; Groom et al., 2005). Several issues need addressing when one attempts to integrate biological control of pests of wildlands into the larger framework of conservation biology. In the chapters that follow, experts illustrate some of the problems that can arise when such integration is lacking and provide insights for avoiding problems that may affect the management program or conservation interests.

In Chapter 2, readers are presented with a conceptual framework for confirming whether an invasive species is the primary cause of environmental change and for deciding how to minimize its impacts, potentially as part of a larger package of restoration activities. Approaches potentially able to generate the desired outcomes are discussed and illustrated with the example of conservation threats to floodplain forests in New England. Chapter 3 subsequently addresses the means (tools) available to control invasive species. Depending on circumstances, control goals may be eradication, human-sustained invader suppression with periodic mechanical or chemical control plus monitoring, or permanent area-wide invader suppression through alteration of ecosystem processes or programs of biological control. Once goals are set, a variety of tools may be relevant and are discussed (mechanical, chemical, biological, combinations) in terms of the system or pest attributes that affect efficacy, control cost, and effects on the environment. Chapter 4 examines tradeoffs among risks posed by major control methods using case histories of particular projects. Chapter 5 continues this discussion through an examination of how the risks and benefits of biological control projects against wildland pests can best be recognized and compared, through the planned interaction of biological control scientists and conservation biologists. At the end of these chapters, readers should have a better understanding of when biological control may be the right or wrong option.

The next block of chapters shifts to the practice of biological control within the context of environmental restoration projects. Chapter 6 discusses the importance of systematics and accurate taxonomic identification, both of pests and natural enemies, for biological control programs. The discussion includes recent developments in molecular techniques applicable to modern biological control programs. Chapter 7 addresses our ability to forecast unwanted impacts of biological control, describing the nature of the concern, reviewing the historical record, and ending with a discussion of unresolved issues. Chapters 8 and 9 discuss how to measure and evaluate outcomes of biological control projects. Because biological control is costly in terms of financial and human resources, there is an increasing demand for accountability as to efficacy when biological control is used to restore or protect native ecosystems or species. Addressed directly in these chapters are the difficult tasks associated with delineating the damaged system’s starting conditions and measuring the progress toward achieving restoration goals. Chapter 8 takes a broad conceptual view of the task, while Chapter 9 reviews techniques used for such assessments and their limits and requirements for application. Chapter 10 discusses a series of biological control projects conducted in wildland ecosystems. These cases provide concrete examples of the kinds of damage that can be corrected with biological control, and the discussions of project details highlight the variety of issues that can affect such work.

Concluding chapters address societal and economic matters. Chapter 11 discusses laws and regulations that affect biological control. The evolution of regulations and regulatory agencies from several parts of the world are reviewed, which provides the context for recommendations for improvements in biological control regulations. Chapter 12 describes how conflicts among groups may arise during a biological control project. The focus of the chapter is on methods for setting goals and resolving disagreements that are either initially present or arise during the conduct of the project. Chapter 13 discusses ethical principles related to the introduction of non-native species, focusing on processes and goals that can help resolve disagreements among parties in conflict. In Chapter 14, we discuss economic issues associated with species invasions and their biological control in wildlands. Chapter 15 describes steps to reform the practice of biological control and integrate its use against pests of wildlands into a conservation framework. It also makes recommendations for changes needed to make biological control of agricultural and ornamental pests at least environmentally neutral.

We end by returning to the central message of the book, looking to the future and describing activities likely to further the integration between biological control activities and those of conservation biologists and restoration ecologists.

Acknowledgments

We thank Bernd Blossey, Charlotte Causton, and David Wagner for reviewing Chapter 1.

References

  1. Campbell, F. and S. E. Schlarbaum. 1994. Fading Forests I. Natural Resource Defense Council. New York.
  2. Groom, M. J., G. K. Meffe, and C. R. Carroll. 2005. Principles of Conservation Biology, 3rd edn. Sinauer Associates. Amherst, Massachusetts, USA.
  3. Hawkins, B. A. and H. V. Cornell. 1999. Theoretical Approaches to Biological Control. Cambridge University Press. New York. 424 pp.
  4. MacDougall, A. S. and R. Turkington. 2005. Are invasive species the drivers or passengers of change in degraded ecosystems? Ecology 86: 42–55.
  5. Roderick, G. K., R. Hufbauer, and M. Navajas. 2012. Evolution and biological control. Evolutionary Applications 5: 419–423.
  6. Van Driesche, R. G. and R. Reardon (eds.). 2014. The Use of Classical Biological Control to Preserve Forests in North America. FHTET 2013-2 September 2014. USDA Forest Service. Morgantown, West Virginia, USA.
  7. Wajnberg, E., J. K. Scott, and P. C. Quimby (eds.). 2001. Evaluating Indirect Ecological Effects of Biological Control. CABI Publishing. New York. 261 pp.
  8. Young, T. P. 2000. Restoration ecology and conservation biology. Biological Conservation 92: 73–83.

Note