Advances in monitoring of native and invasive insect pests of crops
  • Highlights the relationship between climate change and the emergence of invasive insect crop pests
  • Considers the key challenges facing the identification of crop insect pests and the role of new, emerging technologies in improving the rate of detection (e.g. image-based, DNA barcoding)
  • Reviews the establishment of successful integrated pest management (IPM) programmes to control and/or eradicate the existence of invasive species
1140260977
Advances in monitoring of native and invasive insect pests of crops
  • Highlights the relationship between climate change and the emergence of invasive insect crop pests
  • Considers the key challenges facing the identification of crop insect pests and the role of new, emerging technologies in improving the rate of detection (e.g. image-based, DNA barcoding)
  • Reviews the establishment of successful integrated pest management (IPM) programmes to control and/or eradicate the existence of invasive species
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Advances in monitoring of native and invasive insect pests of crops

Advances in monitoring of native and invasive insect pests of crops

Advances in monitoring of native and invasive insect pests of crops

Advances in monitoring of native and invasive insect pests of crops

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Overview

  • Highlights the relationship between climate change and the emergence of invasive insect crop pests
  • Considers the key challenges facing the identification of crop insect pests and the role of new, emerging technologies in improving the rate of detection (e.g. image-based, DNA barcoding)
  • Reviews the establishment of successful integrated pest management (IPM) programmes to control and/or eradicate the existence of invasive species

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781801461078
Publisher: Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing
Publication date: 01/24/2023
Series: Burleigh Dodds Series in Agricultural Science , #128
Pages: 394
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.88(d)

About the Author

Dr Michelle Fountain is Head of Pest and Pathogen Ecology at the world-famous NIAB East Malling (formerly East Malling Research), UK. She is internationally renowned for her research on integrated insect pest management (IPM) and insect pollination in fruit horticulture. Dr Fountain is co-editor of Integrated management of diseases and pests of tree fruit, published by Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing in 2019.


Dr Tom Pope is Reader in Entomology and Integrated Pest Management at Harper Adams University, a leading agricultural university in the UK. A fellow of the Royal Entomological Society, Dr Pope is a globally recognised expert in tracking and understanding the behaviour of insect and other pests as well as in the design and implementation of IPM programmes.



Dr Archie K. Murchie is an applied agricultural entomologist working in the Agri-Food & Biosciences Institute, which is a Government-funded organisation based in Northern Ireland. He obtained his PhD in biological control of crop pests in 1997 from Rothamsted Research and Keele Universityand is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society, and Honorary Senior Lecturer at Queen’s UniversityBelfast.

Dr. William (Bill) Hutchison is a Professor and Extension Entomologist at the University of Minnesota, St. Paul, USA. His expertise is applied insect population ecology, as it relates to the development of innovative Integrated Pest Management (IPM) programs for a variety of fruit and vegetable crops. He has also been active in evaluating the long-term sustainability of insect-resistant, genetically engineered (GE) maize, and implementing GE crops into IPM programs. He is also active in international IPM research, with a current US-AID project in East Africa.

Dr Alistair Drake is a retired entomologist who holds honorary positions with The University of New South Wales and the Institute for Applied Ecology at the University of Canberra. His research interests include the development of radar techniques for insect observation, their application to pest forecasting, aeroecology (especially of insects), and more general aspects of animal migration and applied ecology. He has co-authored a monograph on radar entomology and co-edited a multiauthor book on insect migration.

Dr Alan MacLeod works in the United Kingdom for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Alan was chair of the International Advisory Group on Pest Risk Analysis, providing technical support to the International Plant Protection Convention and has a strong interest in PRA training and has worked with the IPPC and international colleagues to deliver PRA training to support countries in Asia and Africa. Alan has published over 100 scientific papers and guest edited journal special issues focussed on plant health and biosecurity.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Detection

  • 1. Advances in techniques for trapping crop insect pests: Archie K. Murchie, Agri-Food & Biosciences Institute, UK;
  • 2. Advances and challenges in monitoring insect pests of major field crops in the United States: Erin W. Hodgson and Ashley N. Dean, Iowa State University, USA; Anders Huseth, North Carolina State University, USA; and William D. Hutchison, University of Minnesota, USA;
  • 3. Quantifying captures from insect pest trap networks: Nicholas C. Manoukis, USDA-ARS, USA;
  • 4. Developments in crop insect pest detection techniques: Richard W. Mankin, USDA-ARS, USA;
  • 5. Monitoring airborne movement of crop insect pests and beneficials: V. Alistair Drake, University of Canberra and University of New South Wales, Australia;

Part 2 Identification, modelling and risk assessment

  • 6. Advances in image-based identification and analysis of crop insect pests: Daniel Guyer, Michigan State University, USA; and Charles Whitfield, NIAB, UK;
  • 7. Advances in insect pest monitoring using pest population growth and geospatial data for pest risk assessment: Michael J. Brewer, Texas A&M AgriLife Research, USA; Isaac L. Esquivel, North Florida Research and Education Center, University of Florida, USA; and John W.Gordy, Syngenta Crop Protection, USA;
  • 8. Advances in pest risk assessment techniques focusing on invertebrate pests of European outdoor crops: Mark W. Ramsden, Samuel Telling, Daniel J. Leybourne, Natasha Alonso and Sacha White, RSK ADAS Ltd, UK; and Nikos Georgantzis, Burgundy School of Business, France;

Part 3 Invasive species

  • 9. Assessing the potential economic impact of invasive plant pests: Monique Mourits and Alfons Oude Lansink, Wageningen University, The Netherlands;
  • 10. Developing effective phytosanitary measures to prevent the introduction of invasive insect pests: Alan MacLeod and Dominic Eyre, DEFRA, UK;
  • 11. Mitigating invasive insect species: eradication, long-term management, and the importance of sampling and monitoring: Amy Morey, University of Minnesota, USA; and Robert Venette, USDA Forest Service, USA;
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