Published 1996 | Version v1

Biological Control of Marine Pests

Description

(Uploaded by Plazi for the IPBES Invasive Alien Species Assessment) Biological control, as used in terrestrial systems, may hold promise for use against exotic marine species. We first review some marine pests, displaying their diversity, the damage they cause, and possible controls. We then contrast approaches for marine and terrestrial pest control, providing guidelines for adapting terrestrial controls to the marine environment. Although several of the same principles apply in terrestrial and marine environments, marine systems differ with respect to the types of control agents available, the degree of pest-population reduction needed for effective control, the spatial scale over which biological control must operate effectively, the practicality of implementation, and the nature and degree of concern over safety. As an example, we propose a strategy for developing a biological control program against the European green crab, Carcinus maenas, which has had substantial negative impacts where previously introduced (New England, Atlantic Canada, South Africa, south Australia) and which has recently been introduced to central California, and to Tasmania. We conclude that biological control may be possible for some marine pests, but that existing strategies and expectations will require modification. Key words: biological control; biocontrol agents, safety testing of; Carcinus maenas; green crab; host specificity; introduced species; marine pests, biological control of; natural enemies; parasitic castrator; recruitment, importance of; Rhizocephala.

Files

Lafferty and Kuris - 1996 - Biological Control of Marine Pests.pdf

Files (1.5 MB)

Additional details

Identifiers

URL
hash://md5/cdd8cacb36a9ce00a78c5ef8026fac4c
URN
urn:lsid:zotero.org:groups:2352922:items:QCQPFXJT
DOI
10.2307/2265695