Abstract
Immobilized preys are routinely used in agro-ecological exposure studies to quantify predation of pests under field conditions, but this method has not been validated. Our purpose was to determine the validity of using immobilized adults of the major rice pest Nilaparvata lugens, brown plant hopper (BPH), as sentinels. We used direct observation by video recording to determine the causal agents of removal of field exposed BPH sentinels with two experiments: 1) we recorded removal events of dead, immobilized BPH; and 2) we compared removal of (i) dead, immobilized BPH, (ii) live, immobilized BPH, and (iii) live, mobile BPH. Long-horned grasshoppers were responsible for most removals of dead, immobilized BPH, in both experiments. Predatory ground beetles removed most of the live, immobilized BPH, whereas frogs were the major predators of live, mobile BPH. Overall, we showed that removal of immobilized sentinel prey is not representative for predation of live, mobile prey, stressing the need for a critical assessment of commonly used sentinel methods. In addition, we found that frogs played the major role in predation of BPH in rice. As current strategies to enhance biocontrol of planthoppers in rice focus on arthropod natural enemies, this finding could have major implications.
Introduction
Natural pest suppression by predators is an important ecosystem service in agroecosystems, but quantification of predation is challenging. A common method to measure predation is the placement of immobile prey in the field (referred to as “sentinel” or “prey enrichment”) and quantifying the prey removal rate by comparing the number of prey before and after a known exposure period1,2,3. Sentinel methods are widely used because they are quick, cheap and easy to carry out when compared to alternative methods, such as predator exclusion.
A wide variety of sentinel prey types have been used, including insect eggs4,5,6,7,8, pupae9,10,11, immobilized larvae or adults12,13,14 and artificial prey made from plasticine15,16,17,18,19. While some insect stages are sedentary by nature (eggs, pupae), mobile insect stages (nymphs, larvae and adults) may be immobilized to facilitate placement and retrieval in the field, for instance by fixing them on cards. Here we focus on the assessment of predation using immobilized insect stages, a method that has been widely used (Table 1).
The use of immobilized prey to estimate predation levels in agroecosystems has some potential biases. First, the probability of a removal event of immobilized prey may be higher than for unmanipulated prey because of their inability to escape or defend themselves. Second, natural enemies may have a preference for either mobile or immobile prey. For example, Brooks, et al.20 found a higher predation rate of live, mobile than of dead, immobilized prey in a freshwater macroinvertebrate system, while Steward, et al.21 reported that predatory wasps (Vespidae) preferred pinned to unpinned larvae. Hence, the method of prey manipulation can affect the estimation of predation rates.
An important aspect of determining the validity of a sentinel method is to assess whether the removal agent of immobilized prey is also a predator of the prey in unmanipulated settings. Direct observation can provide firsthand information about the predators involved in pest suppression22,23,24,25,26, but this method is laborious and difficult at night and under adverse weather conditions. Video recording of exposed prey can resolve these limitations as it allows continuous monitoring for extended periods under a wide range of environmental conditions. Yet, only a very limited number of studies have observed predation of sentinel prey by video recording11,19,27, and we are not aware of studies that tested the validity of immobilized sentinel preys using video recording of predation.
Here we studied the removal of brown planthopper (BPH) Nilaparvata lugens Stål (Homoptera: Delphacidae) in rice using video cameras. BPH is one of the major rice pests in Asia28. Varietal resistance and insecticides are the main strategies for BPH control in Asia, but outbreaks may still occur as a result of breakdown of varietal resistance to BPH, resistance development in BPH against the insecticides used, and decimation of natural enemy populations by pesticides29. Biological control for BPH by natural enemies (predators, parasitoids and pathogens) is critically needed to prevent outbreaks and reduce the side effects of pesticides30.
There are over 160 reported species of predators of planthoppers in rice, mostly invertebrates, with spiders (Araneae) being the dominant group31. Predators are attributed a major role in natural pest suppression of BPH28,32,33. The impact of predators on BPH has been quantified mainly using predator exclusion and analysis of predator and prey population dynamics34. Sentinel methods have been used for BPH eggs5, but not for assessment of predation of nymphs or adults.
The objective of our study was to determine the validity of using adult BPH as a sentinel to quantify predation levels in rice. We asked two research questions: (i) what is the identity and relative importance of the agents responsible for removal of dead, immobilized BPH, and (ii) is the removal of immobilized BPH representative of BPH predation under unmanipulated conditions? We carried out two experiments to address these questions. In a first experiment, we recorded removal events of immobilized, dead BPH. In a second experiment, we used a comparative approach with three treatments and recorded agents removing (1) dead, immobilized BPH, (2) live, immobilized BPH, and (3) live, mobile BPH.
Results
In the first experiment, 168 full removals (the removal of the entire body of a BPH) and 42 partial removals (the removal of only a part of the BPH body) of dead, immobilized BPH were recorded out of 250 BPH exposed (Supplementary material 1). Long-horned grasshoppers (Tettigoniidae: Conocephalus longipennis) were responsible for 85% of the full removals, while the contribution of known BPH predators such as wolf spiders (Lycosidae) and ground beetles (Carabidae) accounted for only 9% of the full removals (Fig. 1). Marsh flies (Sciomyzidae: Sepedon spp.) and long-horned grasshoppers (Tettigoniidae: C. longipennis) were the main agents responsible for partial removal of BPH, with again a minor role for spiders (Linyphiidae, Lycosidae, Salticidae) and predatory beetles (Staphylinidae, Carabidae) (Fig. 1).
In the second experiment, a total of 44 full removals and 28 partial removals of dead immobilized BPH were recorded out of 150 BPH, and 66 full removals and 25 partial removals of live, immobilized BPH, also out of 150. Full removals were significantly more prevalent with live, immobilized BPH than with dead BPH (generalized linear mixed model, z = 2.11, P = 0.035), while partial removals were not different between these two treatments (z = −0.42, P = 0.68). For the live, mobile BPH treatment, we recorded 93 full removals out of 634 exposed and freely moving BPH, while 493 left the monitored rice stems.
There were major differences in the taxa responsible for removal of BPH in the three treatments (dead immobilized BPH, live immobilized BPH, and live mobile BPH) (Fig. 2, Supplementary material 2). Long-horned grasshoppers (C. longipennis) removed 20 dead, immobilized BPH (45%), rain caused 30% of the removals, while ground beetles (Carabidae) and marsh flies (Sciomyzidae: Sepedon spp.) caused a major part of partial removals, 68% and 21% respectively. The major taxa responsible for removal of live, immobilized BPH were ground beetles (82%) and wolf spiders (Lycosidae, 8%). In addition, BPH escaped occasionally from the sticky tape. The major taxa for partial removals of live, immobilized BPH were again ground beetles (60%) and marsh flies (27%). The major taxa removing live mobile BPH were frogs (Ranidae: Rana limnocharis), which removed 70 (75%) BPH (Fig. 2); the warbler bird Locustella ochotensis (Locustellidae) was responsible for the removal of 8 live, mobile BPH during two visits (see Supplementary material 3 for video recording of selected predators).
There was thus strikingly little accordance in the taxa mainly responsible for BPH removal in the three treatments. Ground beetles (Carabidae) and wolf spiders (Lycosidae) were the only two taxa that removed BPH in all treatments (Fig. 3). Long-horned grasshoppers (Tettigoniidae) and crickets (Gryllidae) were only observed to remove dead, immobilized BPH, while frogs (Ranidae), warbler birds (Locustellidae), rove beetles (Staphylinidae) and dwarf spiders (Linyphiidae) were only observed to remove live, mobile BPH (Fig. 3).
The success rate (removals/attempts) for ground beetles (Carabidae) was significantly higher in the treatments with immobilized BPH than in case of live, mobile BPH (χ2 = 17.8, df = 1, P < 0.001, and χ2 = 8.9, P = 0.003). No significant differences in success rate were found between the two treatments with immobilized BPH for both ground beetles (Carabidae) and wolf spiders (Lycosidae). Frogs rarely tried to remove dead, immobilized BPH (1 attempt by Rana limnocharis) or live, immobilized BPH (3 attempts by Pelophylax nigromaculatus), but these attempts were not successful.
During the second experiment, the abundance of arthropods in the study field was assessed with 36 blower-vac samples. Focusing on arthropod predators responsible for removal of live, mobile BPH (treatment 3), ground beetles (Carabidae) had the highest abundance (38 specimens caught), followed by wolf spiders (Lycosidae, 31) and money spiders (Linyphiidae, 30). Low numbers of jumping spiders (Salticidae, 10), and rove beetles (Staphylinidae, 2) were found. There was no significant relationship between the abundance of arthropod predator taxa (as estimated by blower-vac sampling) and the number of live, mobile BPH removed by these taxa (P = 0.35).
The results of the second experiment confirm those of the first experiment with respect to the major role of the long-horned grasshopper C. longinpennis in full removal of dead, immobilized BPH (Figs 1 and 2). Differences concerned a more prominent role of Carabidae in treatment 1 of experiment 2, and, in particular, a large impact of rain. In the first experiment, rain was responsible for less than 1% of all full removals of dead, immobilized BPH, but in the second experiment rain was responsible for about 30% of losses. The removals happened mainly (92%) during a single intense rain event delivering 21 mm within one hour during the second experiment. In comparison, the most intense daily rainfall during the first experiment was 18.4 mm deposited over a few hours.
Discussion
Our data demonstrate that (1) the agents responsible for removal of immobilized BPH sentinels differed greatly in identity and relative importance from the taxa found preying on live, mobile BPH, and (2) frogs played a major role in removal of live, mobile BPH.
The taxa we recorded removing live, mobile BPH are all known predators of BPH31,35,36, with the exception of the warbler bird L. ochotensis, which represents a first time record. In contrast, the agents recorded fully removing dead, immobilized hoppers were a mix of taxa known as omnivores (Tettigoniidae), scavengers (Sciomyzidae), true predators (Lycosidae, Carabidae), and even herbivores (Acrididae)37. The longhorned grasshopper C. longipennis (Tettigoniidae), responsible for most removals of dead, immobilized BPH in both experiments, is an opportunistic omnivore known to feed on parts of the rice plant as well as stemborer egg masses38,39. Records of C. longipennis consuming live, mobile nymphs and adults of BPH are based on inclusion tests conducted in the laboratory40,41. As C. longipennis removed only dead, immobilized BPH and not any live BPH, this species should not be considered to play a role in predation of BPH under field conditions.
Other notable differences between the treatments in experiment 2, were the large impact of rain and the significantly higher success rate of carabid predators in full removal of dead, immobilized BPH as compared to live, mobile BPH. Taking the overall ratio of full removals over the total number of BPH exposed as an approximation, the overall removal proportions in live, mobile BPH was highest (93/141, corrected for departures), followed by live, immobilized BPH (66/150) and dead BPH (44/150). The difference in removals and success rate between live, immobilized BPH and dead BPH was only small, which is likely due to the rather short survival time in the field of live immobilized BPH (50% mortality after about 3 hours). We conclude that removal of immobilized BPH (either dead or live) is not representative of predation of live, mobile BPH and exposure of immobilized BPH as sentinels is not a valid method to quantify predation levels in rice fields.
Using direct observation with the explicit aim to validate sentinel methods has not been done before, probably because direct observation is laborious and difficult to carry out. However, with the current availability of affordable, high-quality video cameras with night vision, direct observation has become a feasible and powerful approach to validate and complement sentinel methods.
Our study is the first to use direct observation and video monitoring to study predation of BPH in rice. Remarkably, despite the pest status of BPH and the major role attributed to predators in its natural control, no studies have been published on the identity and relative importance of predators of BPH based on direct observation of predation in the field. This might explain why the prominent role of frogs in BPH predation as found in our study has so far gone unnoticed, attributing the major role to spiders and water bugs32,42.
Frog species, including R. limnocharis, have been previously recognized as potential predators of BPH35,36. However, their contribution to pest suppression has, so far, not been considered significant37. This is surprising considering the abundance of frogs in rice agro-ecosystems and the importance of insects in the diet of frogs43. Quantitative studies on the role of frogs in BPH predation are lacking, and major text books on integrated and biocontrol of rice pests30,44 as well as key publications on assessment of the role of natural enemies in rice pest management34,45 only focus on arthropods but see43. Although our findings on the role of frogs and birds cannot simply be generalized in time and space, they suggest an arthropod bias in the literature.
The abundance of major natural enemies is usually estimated with suction sampling and taken as a measure of the level of biocontrol in rice fields46,47,48,49,50. The minor role of arthropod predators relative to frogs in our study cannot be attributed to low density, because arthropod predators had a relatively high density at our study site compared to those in unsprayed farmers’ fields in Jiangxi Province (Zou et al., unpublished data). We did not find a significant relation between the abundance of arthropod predator taxa in the blower-vac samples and the number of live, mobile BPH removed per taxon. This suggests that care should be taken when interpreting abundance data of taxa of known predators in studies aiming at quantification of field predation levels.
The implications of our study are twofold. Methodologically, the study makes clear that caution must be taken in the interpretation of results from experiments using immobilized sentinels, and provides a strong argument for validation of sentinel methods using video monitoring prior to full-scale application. We also recommend to conduct video monitoring experiments of predation in other major pest-crop systems in which predators are attributed a key role in natural pest suppression but where direct evidence on the identity and relative importance of the predator taxa is still lacking. The second major finding of our study was the important role of frogs in predation of live, mobile BPH. Current strategies to enhance natural suppression of planthoppers in rice focus on arthropod natural enemies (predators as well as parasitoids)51,52, and a potentially major role of frogs deserves further investigation and scrutiny. Priorities for these follow-up studies concern the effect of BPH prey density at patch and field level and the role of frogs in other major irrigated rice growing areas in Asia.
Materials and Methods
Study site and insect material
This study was conducted in two adjacent irrigated rice fields at the Jiangxi Agricultural University (28°46.17′N, 115°49.99′E), Jiangxi Province, China. The first field (400 m2) was planted with the hybrid early rice variety PoYou-364 at the end of April 2015, and the second field (300 m2) was planted with the hybrid middle rice variety Y-liangyou-1 in mid-June 2015. Both rice varieties are susceptible to BPH and no pesticides were used. Daily precipitation data during the experimental period were obtained from the university’s weather station, located 500 m away from the study fields.
BPH for exposure studies were reared on rice plants in cages (size: 0.4 × 0.65 × 1.5 m) in a greenhouse, using the variety PoYou-364 before July 2015 and Y-liangyou-1 afterwards. The original starting material for the BPH culture was sourced from Nanjing Agricultural University and Yangzhou University.
Experiment 1
In the first experiment, we used a digital video camera (BenQ®, M33) with a resolution of 1920 × 1080 pixels per square inch, a 4.6–46 mm zoom lens and IR night vision function. The camera was powered by a 12 V lead-acid E-bike battery with a capacity of 12 Ah, which allowed at least 45 hours continuous recording (Fig. 4). The camera and battery were connected with a 2 A, 12-to-5V USB-converter and were placed in plastic containers covered with aluminum foil for protection against rain and heat. Data were stored on a 32 G SD card, which was replaced every 8 hours.
Three replicate exposures were done at 48, 55 and 62 days after transplanting. At each time, BPH obtained from the rearing cages were killed by placing them in a freezer at −18 °C for 24 hours. Five 20 cm-long rice stem pieces with a total of 25 adult female BPH (5 per each stem piece) were placed in the field next to a rice plant, at least 3 meters from the edge. BPH were fixed 5 cm from the top of the stem piece, on a 1 cm2 double-sided tape.
After placement in the field, the BPH sentinels were monitored over a 72-hour period. A set of BPH sentinels was replaced when fewer than three of the original 25 BPH were left on the stem pieces. In total, over the three replicate exposure trials, we monitored the fate of 250 BPH. The camera was installed at 30 cm distance to obtain the best focus.
Experiment 2
In the second experiment, we used three surveillance cameras (DFD®, Shenzhen, China) with a resolution of 1280 × 720 pixels per square inch, an 8 mm fixed lens and IR night vision function (Fig. 5a). The focus distance was set at 30 cm. The cameras were connected to a four-channel Digital Video Recorder (DVR) for data storage, which in turn was connected to a monitoring screen (Fig. 5b). The three cameras were put in the middle of the field, with a spacing of 3 m. We used one camera per treatment.
The three treatments were: (1) dead, immobilized BPH (2) live, immobilized BPH, and (3) live, mobile BPH. In treatment 1, 25 BPH were fixed on rice stem pieces using double-sided sticky tape, as in Experiment 1. In treatment 2, 25 BPH were temporarily (reversibly) immobilized by cooling them at −18 °C for five minutes, and then fixed on rice stems pieces using double-sided sticky tape as in treatment 1. While all BPH were alive when introduced to the field, they eventually died. The time of 50% mortality (excluding predation events) was 3.2 ± 2.4 hours (mean ± SD), and after 16.7 ± 4.7 hours all BPH were dead. For treatment 3, BPH (80% adults and 20% late-instar nymphs with similar body size as adults) were transferred to a tube containing a 20 cm piece of rice stem (Fig. 5c). After 20 minutes, when BPH had settled on the rice stem, the stem pieces were placed in the field, pressed against a rice plant in front of the camera, and the tube was carefully removed. The initial number of BPH in each exposure was 42 ± 18 (mean ± SD). We used a higher initial number of BPH for this treatment than for the immobilized BPH treatments because we anticipated that part of the BPH would move away from the stem pieces after placement in the field. In total, 634 live, mobile BPH were exposed.
After placement in the field, the three treatments were monitored over a 24-hour time period. The above protocol was replicated six times (“observation rounds”), at 32, 47, 59, 67, 80 and 88 days after transplanting, respectively, which covered crop development from tillering to ripening stage. Rice stems with live, mobile BPH were replaced with fresh ones after 8 or 12 hours to compensate for departures and to ensure that sufficient BPH were in the view of the camera to record predation events.
Monitoring of arthropod abundance
In experiment 1, visual counts of arthropods were conducted on the second day of the video monitoring during five 1-hour periods at the following times: sunrise (04:00–05:00 h), morning (09:00–10:00 h), afternoon (14:00–15:00 h), sunset (19:00–20:00 h), and night (23:00–00:00 h). Night observations were conducted using red light. Counts were performed by two observers, each of them randomly walking through one half of the field where no video recording took place, and recording all encountered predators and other taxa responsible for BPH removal.
In experiment 2, immediately after each observation round, the arthropod community in the field was sampled using a blower-vac (Oleo-Mac BV300, 30.5 cc) that was modified for arthropod sampling53,54. Each time, six samples were taken using a 40 cm diameter enclosure (0.13 m2) and a suction time of two minutes. Due to the relatively small sampling area, we do not expect sampling has influenced the overall arthropod density in the field or affected BPH removal in the observation round.
Data analysis
The video recordings were reviewed and all BPH removal events were counted. The removal agents were identified at least to family level. We distinguished between “full removal” and “partial removal”. Full removal was defined as the removal of the entire body of a BPH, while partial removal was the removal of only a part of the BPH body. We calculated the success rate for each removal agent as the ratio of the number of successful removal attempts (full and partial) and total number of attempts captured on video, where an attempt was defined as the removal agent being in the view of the camera, from its appearance to its departure, with the removal agent making at least one attempt to capture BPH.
Differences in the number of full removals and partial removals between treatment 1 (dead BPH) and treatment 2 (live immobilized BPH) were analysed by generalized linear mixed models with Poisson error distribution with log-link function55, treatment as fixed factor and observation round as random factor. For the overall removals and attempts done by different agents, data from the six observation rounds were pooled and differences between treatments in the success rate of the same taxon were tested with χ2 tests. Correlation between the number of a taxon in the blower-vac samples and the number of full removals by this taxon was tested with Spearman’s rank correlation test. Analyses were performed in R56, using the “lme4” package57.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Zou, Y. et al. Video monitoring of brown planthopper predation in rice shows flaws of sentinel methods. Sci. Rep. 7, 42210; doi: 10.1038/srep42210 (2017).
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
References
Luck, R. F., Shepard, B. M. & Kenmore, P. E. Experimental methods for evaluating arthropod natural enemies. Annu Rev Entomol 33, 367–391 (1988).
Macfadyen, S., Davies, A. P. & Zalucki, M. P. Assessing the impact of arthropod natural enemies on crop pests at the field scale. Insect Sci 22, 20–34 (2015).
Chisholm, P. J., Gardiner, M. M., Moon, E. G. & Crowder, D. W. Tools and techniques for investigating impacts of habitat complexity on biological control. Biol Control 75, 48–57 (2014).
Bianchi, F. J. J. A. et al. Landscape factors affecting the control of Mamestra brassicae by natural enemies in Brussels sprout. Agric, Ecosyst Environ 107, 145–150 (2005).
Claridge, M. F., Morgan, J. C., Steenkiste, A. E., Iman, M. & Damayanti, D. Seasonal patterns of egg parasitism and natural biological control of rice brown planthopper in Indonesia. Agric For Entomol 1, 297–304 (1999).
de Kraker, J., Van Huis, A., Van Lenteren, J. C., Heong, K. L. & Rabbinge, R. Egg mortality of rice leaf folders Cnaphalocrocis medinalis and Marasmia patnalisin irrigated rice fields. BioControl 44, 451–473 (1999).
Werling, B. P., Meehan, T. D., Robertson, B. A., Gratton, C. & Landis, D. A. Biocontrol potential varies with changes in biofuel-crop plant communities and landscape perenniality. GCB Bioenergy 3, 347–359 (2011).
Pearce, S. & Zalucki, M. P. Do predators aggregate in response to pest density in agroecosystems? Assessing within-field spatial patterns. J Appl Ecol 43, 128–140 (2006).
Naranjo, S. E. Long-term assessment of the effects of transgenic Bt cotton on the function of the natural enemy community. Environ Entomol 34, 1211–1223 (2005).
Prasifka, J. R., Schmidt, N. P., Kohler, K. A., O’Neal, M. E., Hellmich, R. L. & Singer, J. W. Effects of living mulches on predator abundance and sentinel prey in a corn-soybean-forage rotation. Environ Entomol 35, 1423–1431 (2006).
Grieshop, M. J., Werling, B., Buehrer, K., Perrone, J., Isaacs, R. & Landis, D. Big Brother is Watching: Studying Insect Predation in the Age of Digital Surveillance. Am Entomol 58, 172–182 (2012).
Östman, Ö. The relative effects of natural enemy abundance and alternative prey abundance on aphid predation rates. Biol Control 30, 281–287 (2004).
Geiger, F. et al. Persistent negative effects of pesticides on biodiversity and biological control potential on European farmland. Basic Appl Ecol 11, 97–105 (2010).
Dobbs, E. & Potter, D. Conservation Biological Control and Pest Performance in Lawn Turf: Does Mowing Height Matter? Environ Manage 53, 648–659 (2014).
Lemessa, D., Hambäck, P. A. & Hylander, K. Arthropod but not bird predation in Ethiopian homegardens is higher in tree-poor than in tree-rich landscapes. PLoS ONE 10, e0126639 (2015).
Ferrante, M., Lo Cacciato, A. & Lovei, G. L. Quantifying predation pressure along an urbanisation gradient in Denmark using artificial caterpillars. Eur J Entomol 111, 649–654 (2014).
Richards, L. A. & Coley, P. D. Seasonal and habitat differences affect the impact of food and predation on herbivores: a comparison between gaps and understory of a tropical forest. Oikos 116, 31–40 (2007).
Posa, M. R. C., Sodhi, N. S. & Koh, L. P. Predation on artificial nests and caterpillar models across a disturbance gradient in Subic Bay, Philippines. J Trop Ecol 23, 27–33 (2007).
Nurdiansyah, F., Denmead, L. H., Clough, Y., Wiegand, K. & Tscharntke, T. Biological control in Indonesian oil palm potentially enhanced by landscape context. Agric, Ecosyst Environ 232, 141–149 (2016).
Brooks, A. C., Gaskell, P. N. & Maltby, L. L. Sublethal effects and predator-prey interactions: Implications for ecological risk assessment. Environ Toxicol Chem 28, 2449–2457 (2009).
Steward, V. B., Smith, K. G. & Stephen, F. M. Predation by wasps on lepidopteran larvae in an Ozark forest canopy. Ecol Entomol 13, 81–86 (1988).
Pfannenstiel, R. S. & Yeargan, K. V. Identification and Diel Activity Patterns of Predators Attacking Helicoverpa zea (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) Eggs in Soybean and Sweet Corn. Environ Entomol 31, 232–241 (2002).
Costamagna, A. C., van der Werf, W., Bianchi, F. J. J. A. & Landis, D. A. An exponential growth model with decreasing r captures bottom-up effects on the population growth of Aphis glycines Matsumura (Hemiptera : Aphididae). Agric For Entomol 9, 297–305 (2007).
de Kraker, J., van Huis, A., van Lenteren, J. C., Heong, K. L. & Rabbinge, R. Identity and relative importance of egg predators of rice leaffolders (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae). Biol Control 19, 215–222 (2000).
Landis, D. A. & van der Werf, W. Early-season predation impacts the establishment of aphids and spread of beet yellows virus in sugar beet. Entomophaga 42, 499–516 (1997).
Westerman, P. R., Hofman, A., Vet, L. E. M. & van der Werf, W. Relative importance of vertebrates and invertebrates in epigeaic weed seed predation in organic cereal fields. Agric, Ecosyst Environ 95, 417–425 (2003).
Frank, S. D., Wratten, S. D., Sandhu, H. S. & Shrewsbury, P. M. Video analysis to determine how habitat strata affects predator diversity and predation of Epiphyas postvittana (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) in a vineyard. Biol Control 41, 230–236 (2007).
Heong, K. L., Wong, L. & Delos Reyes, J. H. Addressing Planthopper Threats to Asian Rice Farming and Food Security: Fixing Insecticide Misuse. In: Rice Planthoppers: Ecology, Management, Socio Economics and Policy (eds Heong, L. K., Cheng, J. & Escalada, M. M. ). Springer: Netherlands, (2015).
Cheng, J. A. Rice planthopper problems and relevant causes in China. In: Planthoppers: new threats to the sustainability of intensive rice production systems in Asia (eds Heong, K. L. & Hardy, B. ) International Rice Research Institute (2009).
Reissig, W. Illustrated guide to integrated pest management in rice in tropical Asia. The Philippines International Rice Research Institute (1985).
Chiu, S. C. Biological control of the brown planthopper. In: Brown Planthopper: Threat to rice production in Asia (eds International Rice Research Institute). International Rice Research Institute (1979).
Kenmore, P. E., Carino, F. O., Perez, C. A., Dyck, V. A. & Gutierrez, A. P. Population regulation of the rice brown planthopper (Nilaparvata lugens Stål) within rice fields in the Philippines. J Plant Prot 1, 19–37 (1984).
Settle, W. H. et al. Managing tropical rice pests through conservation of generalist natural enemies and alternative prey. Ecology 77, 1975–1988 (1996).
Ooi, P. A. C. & Shepard, B. M. Predators and parasitoids of rice insect pests. In: Biology and management of rice insects (eds Heinrichs, E. A. ). Wiley Eastern Limited (1994).
Dupo, A. L. B. & Barrion, A. T. Taxonomy and general biology of delphacid planthoppers in rice agroecosytems. In: Planthoppers: new threats to the sustainability of intensive rice production systems in Asia (eds Heong, K. L. & Hardy, B. ). Los Baños (2009).
Lou, Y.-G., Zhang, G.-R., Zhang, W.-Q., Hu, Y. & Zhang, J. Biological control of rice insect pests in China. Biol Control 68, 8–20 (2013).
Vreden, G.v. & Ahmadzabid. AL Pest of rice and their natural enemies in Peninsular Malaysia. Pudoc (1986).
Rothschild, G. H. L. The Biology and Ecology of Rice-Stem Borers in Sarawak (Malaysian Borneo). J Appl Ecol 8, 287–322 (1971).
Shepard, B. M., Barrion, A. T. & Litsinger, J. A. Friends of the rice farmer: helpful insects, spiders, and pathogens: friends of the rice farmers. The Philippines International Rice Research Institute (1987).
Rubia, E., Ferrer, E. & Shepard, B. Biology and predatory behavior of Conocephalus longipennis (de Haan) (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae. J Plant Prot 7, 47–54 (1990).
Rubia, E., Pena, N., Almazan, L. & Shepard, B. Efficacy of selected predators against some insect pests of rice. J Plant Prot 7, 69–76 (1990).
Bottrell, D. G. & Schoenly, K. G. Resurrecting the ghost of green revolutions past: The brown planthopper as a recurring threat to high-yielding rice production in tropical Asia. J Asia-Pacif Entomol 15, 122–140 (2012).
Lu, Z., Zhu, P., Gurr, G. M., Zheng, X., Chen, G. & Heong, K. L. Rice pest management by ecological engineering: a pioneering attempt in China. In: Rice Planthoppers (eds Heong, K. L., Cheng, J. & Escalada, M. M. ). Zhejiang University Press (2015).
Heinrichs, E. A. Biology and management of rice insects. John Wiley & Sons (1994).
Shepard, B. M. & Ooi, P. A. C. Techniques for Evaluating Predators and Parasitoids in Rice. In: Rice Insects: Management Strategies (eds Heinrichs, E. A. & Miller, T. A. ). Springer: New York, (1991).
Heong, K. L., Aquino, G. B. & Barrion, A. T. Arthropod community structures of rice ecosystems in the Philippines. Bull Entomol Res 81, 407–416 (1991).
Lu, Z., Villareal, S., Yu, X., Heong, K. L. & Hu, C. Biodiversity and dynamics of planthoppers and their natural enemies in rice fields with different nitrogen regimes. Rice Science 13, 218–226 (2006).
Sarwshri, G. Aboveground arthropod pest and predator diversity in irrigated rice (Oryza sativa L.) production systems of the Philippines. J Trop Agri 45, 1–8 (2007).
Takada, M. B., Takagi, S., Iwabuchi, S., Mineta, T. & Washitani, I. Comparison of generalist predators in winter-flooded and conventionally managed rice paddies and identification of their limiting factors. Springerplus 3, 1–7 (2014).
Ueno, T. Insect natural enemies as bioindicators in rice paddies. J Agric Sci 39, 545–553 (2012).
Heong, K. L., Cheng, J. & Escalada, M. M. Rice Planthoppers - Ecology, management, socio economics and policy. Springer & Zhejiang University Press (2015).
Gurr, G. M. et al. Parasitoids of Asian rice planthopper (Hemiptera: Delphacidae) pests and prospects for enhancing biological control by ecological engineering. Ann Appl Biol 158, 149–176 (2011).
Zou, Y. et al. Modification and Application of a Leaf Blower-vac for Field Sampling of Arthropods. JOVE. e54655 (2016).
Arida, G. & Heong, K. Blower-Vac: a new suction apparatus for sampling rice arthropods. International Rice Research Newsletter 17, 30–31 (1992).
Zuur, A., Ieno, E. N., Walker, N., Saveliev, A. A. & Smith, G. M. Mixed effects models and extensions in ecology with R. Springer Science & Business Media (2009).
R Core Team. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing (2014).
Bates, D., Maechler, M., Bolker, B. & Walker, S. lme4: Linear mixed-effects models using Eigen and S4. R package version 11–7 (2014).
Winqvist, C. et al. Mixed effects of organic farming and landscape complexity on farmland biodiversity and biological control potential across Europe. J Appl Ecol 48, 570–579 (2011).
Frank, S. D. & Shrewsbury, P. M. Effect of conservation strips on the abundance and distribution of natural enemies and predation of Agrotis ipsilon (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) on golf course fairways. Environ Entomol 33, 1662–1672 (2004).
Mathews, C. R., Bottrell, D. G. & Brown, M. W. Habitat manipulation of the apple orchard floor to increase ground-dwelling predators and predation of Cydia pomonella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). Biol Control 30, 265–273 (2004).
Lundgren, J. G. & Fergen, J. K. Enhancing predation of a subterranean insect pest: A conservation benefit of winter vegetation in agroecosystems. Appl Soil Ecol 51, 9–16 (2011).
Yadav, P., Duckworth, K. & Grewal, P. S. Habitat structure influences below ground biocontrol services: A comparison between urban gardens and vacant lots. Landscape Urban Plann 104, 238–244 (2012).
Bianchi, F. J. J. A., Goedhart, P. W. & Baveco, J. M. Enhanced pest control in cabbage crops near forest in The Netherlands. Landscape Ecol 23, 595–602 (2008).
Meehan, T. D., Werling, B. P., Landis, D. A. & Gratton, C. Pest-Suppression Potential of Midwestern Landscapes under Contrasting Bioenergy Scenarios. PLoS ONE 7, e41728 (2012).
Garfinkel, M. & Johnson, M. Pest-removal services provided by birds on small organic farms in northern California. Agric, Ecosyst Environ 211, 24–31 (2015).
Acknowledgements
We thank Linquan Ge from Yangzhou University, Zewen Liu and Congfen Gao from Nanjing Agriculture University for providing brown planthopper rearing sources. We thank Junhui Chen, Daomeng Fu, Xiaolong Huang and Xiaoqing Hu for their help in the field experiments and video reviewing. This study was financially supported by the Division for Earth and Life Sciences of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (grant 833.13.004), the Sci-Tech Landing Projection of Higher Education of Jiangxi Province (KJLD14030) and the Cultivation Plan for Young Scientists of Jiangxi Province (Jinggang star 20153BCB23014).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
Y.Z., J.K., F.J.J.A.B., M.D.T. and W.W. conceived and designed the experiments. Y.Z., M.D.T. and H.X. performed the experiments. Y.Z. and M.D.T. analyzed the data. Y.Z., J.K., F.J.J.A.B. and W.W. wrote the manuscript; other authors provided editorial advices.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Zou, Y., de Kraker, J., Bianchi, F. et al. Video monitoring of brown planthopper predation in rice shows flaws of sentinel methods. Sci Rep 7, 42210 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42210
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42210
This article is cited by
-
Multi-Spatial-Scale Factors Determining the Abundance of Frogs in Rice Paddy Fields and Their Potential as Biological Control Agents
Wetlands (2023)
-
An update of the Worldwide Integrated Assessment (WIA) on systemic pesticides. Part 4: Alternatives in major cropping systems
Environmental Science and Pollution Research (2020)
-
What happens in forests when nobody’s present? A sustainable method to document insect behaviors and interactions using video surveillance
International Journal of Tropical Insect Science (2019)
-
The carabid Pterostichus melanarius uses chemical cues for opportunistic predation and saprophagy but not for finding healthy prey
BioControl (2017)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.