• BGS Hosted Metadata
  •   Search
  •   Map
  •  Sign in

Conservation biological control experiments data, 2005-2009 - RELU Re-bugging the system: promoting adoption of alternative pest management strategies in field crop

This set of conservation biological control experiments data was collected as part of five field experiments investigating agricultural biological control techniques, particularly the effect of wild field margins on pests and predators. The study is part of the NERC Rural Economy and Land Use (RELU) programme. Despite the widespread concerns regarding the use of pesticides in food production and the availability of potentially viable biological pest control strategies in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) systems, the UK cereal crop production remains a bastion of pesticide use. This project aimed to understand further the reasons for this lack of adoption, using the control of summer cereal aphids as a case study. Reasons for this lack of adoption of biocontrol remain a complex interplay of both technical and economic problems. Economists highlight the potential path dependency of an industry to continue to employ a suboptimal technology, caused by past dynamics of adoption resulting in differential private cost structures of each technique. Further, risk aversion on the part of farmers regarding the perceived efficacy of a new technology may also limit up-take. This may be particularly important when IPM rests on portfolios of technologies and when little scientific understanding exists on the effect of portfolio and scale of adoption on overall efficacy. Faced with this, farmers will not adopt a socially superior IPM technology and there exists a clear need for public policy action. This action may take the form of minimising uncertainty through carefully designed research programs, government funding and dissemination of the results of large-scale research studies or direct public support for farm landscape and farm system changes that can promote biocontrol. This research looked at alternatives to the use of insecticides in arable agriculture and the difficulties facing producers in switching over to them. Two approaches were explored: habitat manipulations, to encourage predators and parasites, and using naturally occurring odours to manipulate predator distribution as model technologies. Scale and portfolio effects on biocontrol efficacy have been investigated in controlled and field scale experiments. Aim is to improve the way research and development of new products and techniques are carried out to help break the dependence on chemical pesticides. 'Semiochemical experiment data, 2005-2009 - RELU Re-bugging the system: promoting adoption of alternative pest management strategies in field crop systems' from this same research project are also available. In addition, socio-economic research has been used to help direct natural science research into the development and evaluation of a combination of habitat management and semiochemical push-pull strategies of appropriate scale and complementarity to yield viable, commercially attractive and sustainable alternatives to the use of insecticides in cereal crop agriculture. These socio-economic data are available through the UK Data Archive under study number 6960 (see online resources). Further information and documentation for this study may be found through the RELU Knowledge Portal and the project's ESRC funding award web page (see online resources).

Simple

Date (Publication)
2013-07-26
Citation identifier
CEH:EIDC: / 1331031275297
Citation identifier
https://catalogue.ceh.ac.uk/id/5e7b868b-890f-4246-b818-026ff19e60e2
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

School of Economics, Keynes College, University of Kent

Bailey, A.

A.Bailey@kent.ac.uk

Principal investigator
Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust

Holland, J.

jholland@gwct.org.uk

Author

School of Economics, Keynes College, University of Kent

Bailey, A.

A.Bailey@kent.ac.uk

Owner
Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust

Holland, J.

jholland@gwct.org.uk

Owner
Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust

Holland, J.

jholland@gwct.org.uk

Point of contact
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre

info@eidc.ac.uk

Custodian
Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

  • Land Use

  • Human Health and Safety

  • Habitats and Biotopes

Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
unknown
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
This resource is licensed from UK Data Archive (a department of the University of Essex and not a separate legal entity) and made available under the RELU data licence terms and conditions
Spatial representation type
Text, table
Distance
1  urn:ogc:def:uom:EPSG::9001
Language
English
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Biota
  • Environment
  • Farming
Begin date
2005-01-01
End date
2009-12-31
N
S
E
W
thumbnail




Unique resource identifier
OSGB 1936 / British National Grid
Distribution format
Name Version

Comma-separated values (CSV)

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre

enquiries@ceh.ac.uk

Distributor
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
https://data-package.ceh.ac.uk/data/5e7b868b-890f-4246-b818-026ff19e60e2

Download the data

OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
https://data-package.ceh.ac.uk/sd/5e7b868b-890f-4246-b818-026ff19e60e2.zip

Supporting information

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Other

dataset

Conformance result

Title

Commission Regulation (EU) No 1089/2010 of 23 November 2010 implementing Directive 2007/2/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards interoperability of spatial data sets and services

Date (Publication)
2010-12-08
Statement

Research funded by Economic and Social Research Council, Natural Environment Research Council and Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. Award Number: RES-224-25-0093 This data was collected as part of five field experiments, respectively aiming to: - determine whether floristically enhanced field margins improve levels of cereal aphid control by natural enemies and whether this varies with distance from the margin. - investigate the colonisation of cereal fields by pest natural enemies for fields withand without floristically enhanced wide field margins. - determine whether levels of biocontrol are influenced by landscape complexity and in particular the proportion of enhanced field margins. - determine whether abundance and distribution of flying natural enemies are influenced by landscape complexity and in particular the proportion of enhanced field margins. - investigate the spatial distribution of flying predators and their aphid prey in fields with flower rich margins. Full details of the five experiments and the data collection methodologies used can be found in the user guide, which is included in the data download package.

Metadata

File identifier
5e7b868b-890f-4246-b818-026ff19e60e2 XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
8859 Part 1
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Hierarchy level name

dataset

Date stamp
2025-03-21T13:33:39
Metadata standard name
UK GEMINI
Metadata standard version

2.3

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre

info@eidc.ac.uk

Point of contact
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

thumbnail

Keywords

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

Habitats and Biotopes Human Health and Safety Land Use


Provided by

logo

Share on social sites

Access to the catalogue
Read here the full details and access to the data.




  •   About
  •   Github
  •