Agriculture wants recent method to deal with rising downside of insect resistance to biopesticides, new evaluation finds

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Insect amid leaves. Credit: Rose McKeon

Insect pests which attack crops have extraordinary powers to develop resistance to greener pesticides and a new way to manage resistance risks is needed, according to analysis by University of Stirling scientists.

For more than 70 years, agriculture’s response to pesticide resistance has been to seek new pesticides in an endless race to keep up with evolving pests.

Researchers now propose a new way to step off this treadmill as farmers embrace the ongoing green revolution in by switching to biopesticides derived from natural organisms.

The evolution of resistance to biopesticides—a crucial tool in the development of sustainable crop protection—has huge implications for food security worldwide as the global population grows.

In a bid to address this emerging challenge, researchers have deployed principles from fundamental evolutionary ecological science and proposed a practical framework for managing the risks of biopesticide resistance evolution.

They suggest that farmers can help manage resistance risks by planting a wider diversity of crops and use multiple biopesticides.

Scientists from Stirling’s Faculty of Natural Sciences, working with colleagues at the University of Gothenburg and São Paulo State University, conducted a synthesis of existing biopesticide research and argued that resistance evolution is already occurring and is likely to become widespread as biopesticide use continues to increase.

Dr. Matthew Tinsley, Senior Lecturer in Biological and Environmental Sciences at the University of Stirling, said, “People are blinkered—they think because biopesticides are derived from natural sources it will be more difficult for pests to evolve resistance, but we still need to be worried about resistance to these new agents.

“The lead time to develop biopesticides is five to ten years, so if we wait to act, we will lose these new agents because pests will already have evolved.”

Dr. Rosie Mangan, post-doctoral researcher at the University of Stirling added, “Novel resistance management approaches are needed for these crop protection products to avoid the same treadmill of invention and loss as has happened for chemical pesticides.

“Our perspective argues that farmers can help manage resistance risks by planting a wider diversity of crops and using multiple biopesticides. This will reduce the spread of resistance and help keep biopesticides effective in the long term.”

The new paper, “Increasing ecological heterogeneity can constrain resistance evolution,” is published in Trends in Ecology and Evolution. It forms part of the wider Stirling-led project ENDORSE (Enhancing diversity to overcome resistance evolution).

More information:
Rosie Mangan et al, Increasing ecological heterogeneity can constrain biopesticide resistance evolution, Trends in Ecology & Evolution (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2023.01.012

Journal information:
Trends in Ecology and Evolution



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Trends in Ecology & Evolution


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