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Biological control interventions reduce pest abundance and crop damage while maintaining natural enemies in sub-Saharan Africa: a meta-analysis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Insect pests pose a significant threat to smallholder farming in sub-Saharan Africa, where synthetic pesticides are often hard to access due to health and environmental concerns.
  • - A meta-analysis of 99 studies showed that biocontrol methods reduced pest abundance by 63% and crop damage by over 50%, while increasing crop yield by over 60%, and also increased the abundance of natural pest enemies.
  • - The findings suggest biocontrol is an effective and sustainable alternative to synthetic pesticides and should be integrated into agricultural policies across SSA to support smallholder farmers.

Article Abstract

Insect pests are a major challenge to smallholder crop production in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where access to synthetic pesticides, which are linked to environmental and health risks, is often limited. Biological control interventions could offer a sustainable solution, yet an understanding of their effectiveness is lacking. We used a meta-analysis approach to investigate the effectiveness of commonly used biocontrol interventions and botanical pesticides on pest abundance (PA), crop damage (CD), crop yield (Y) and natural enemy abundance (NEA) when compared with controls with no biocontrol and with synthetic pesticides. We also evaluated whether the magnitude of biocontrol effectiveness was affected by type of biocontrol intervention, crop type, pest taxon, farm type and landscape configuration. Overall, from 99 studies on 31 crops, we found that compared to no biocontrol, biocontrol interventions reduced PA by 63%, CD by over 50% and increased Y by over 60%. Compared to synthetic pesticides, biocontrol resulted in comparable PA and Y, while NEA was 43% greater. Our results also highlighted that the potential for biocontrol to be modulated by landscape configuration is a critical knowledge gap in SSA. We show that biocontrol represents an effective tool for smallholder farmers, which can maintain yields without associated negative pesticide effects. Furthermore, the evidence presented here advocates strongly for including biocontrol practices in national and regional agricultural policies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9727667PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.1695DOI Listing

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