INVESTIGADORES
SOSA alejandro JoaquÍn
artículos
Título:
Lessons from three cases of biological control of native freshwater macrophytes isolated from their natural enemies
Autor/es:
CABRERA WALSH GUILLERMO; MARÍA CRISTINA HERNÁNDEZ; F. MCKAY; M. OLEIRO; M. GUALA; A.J. SOSA
Revista:
AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM HEALTH AND MANAGEMENT
Editorial:
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2017 vol. 20 p. 353 - 360
ISSN:
1463-4988
Resumen:
Classical biological control ?or biocontrol- is a form of pest management comprising in the release of specialized natural enemies (biocontrol agents) of an exotic pest. Classical biocontrol agents are scientifically selected from among the natural enemies the pest has in its native region. However biological control is firmly resisted in many countries because of the belief that it is more risky than not doing anything, or using the more familiar chemical and mechanical control methods. In this review, three classical biocontrol projects from Argentina are described. These projects had the peculiarity that native insects were used to control two native aquatic plants -Waterhyacinth and Waterlettuce- in isolated water bodies where their natural enemies were absent.In two of these projects complete control of the weeds were achieved, and preliminary results are quite promising for the most recent project too. This manuscript stresses that classical biocontrol can be applied in a weed?s nativerange under special circumstances, and describes why such cases can be used to promote biological control of native invaders while circumventing the more resisted aspect of classical biocontrol: introducing exotic species.