Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T00:15:27.359Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Lessons from a Caterpillar Plague in London's Berkeley Square

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Denis F. Owen
Affiliation:
66 Scraptoft Lane, Leicester, England; Formerly Professor of Zoology, Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone, Freetown, Sierra Leone.

Extract

Plagues of caterpillars and other plant-feeding insects tend to occur where trees and other plants grow as man-made monocultures. Herbivorous insects rarely cause extensive damage to mature trees in tropical forests; but even in the tropics, outbreaks are frequent wherever trees of the same species are grown together—as for example along roadways and in built-up areas. In Africa, in particular, peasant cultivators growing their own food tend to plant a variety of species in the same plot, and it is suggested that these people have found by trial and error that polycultures are more resistant to insect damage than are monocultures. English flower-gardeners maintain polycultures in their herbaceous borders and are rarely troubled by insects, but vegetables are now grown as pure stands. This probably leads to a build-up of pests and a need to use pesticides, which of course is encouraged by the gardening and pesticide industries.

Although there remains considerable controversy over the precise relationship between species diversity and population stability, there is much circumstantial and some direct evidence that plagues of plant-feeding insects are much more likely in pure stands of vegetation than in diverse communities. What might be called the community ecology of peasant cultivation is little understood, and there is an urgent need for research before more and more land is converted to monocultures.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1975

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

Allan, P. B. M. (1949). Larval Foodplants. Watkins & Doncaster, London, England: 126 pp.Google Scholar
Barrett, C. G. (1895). The Lepidoptera of the British Islands. Reeve, London, England: Vol. 2, 372 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Newman, E. (1869). An Illustrated Natural History of British Moths. Allen, London, England: viii + 486 pp., illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olshevskii, V. D. (1970). [Hemp against the mole-cricket.—in Russian.] Zashch. Rast., 15, p. 46.Google Scholar
Root, R. B. (1973). Organization of a plant-arthropod association in simple and diverse habitats: the fauna of Collards (Brassica oleracea). Ecol. Monogr., 43, pp. 95124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southwood, T. R. E. (1961). The number of species of insect associated with various trees. J. Anim. Ecol., 30, pp. 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tea Research Institute of East Africa (1969). Part VI. Tea pests. Pp. 114–20 in Tea Growers Handbook, 1969. Tea Boards of Kenya, Uganda & Tanganyika.Google Scholar