Biodiversity and rice pests

How should farmers deal with rice pests? Spray? Use resistant varieties? Or rely on bio-control ecosystem services?

Brown Plant Hopper Spraying is what many farmers do, to the detriment of their health and environment. It also makes the pest problem worse. Why? Because pesticides also kill the pests’ natural enemies, such as spiders. So you need to spray again, and again. Until the pests are pesticide resistant. This has led to huge outbreaks of brown plant hopper, like in Indonesia in the 1980s, which only stopped after most pesticides were banned. ((Brown plant hopper image from CSIRO.))

Use host plant resistance is what many researchers say. Sounds simple enough, and now there are GMO approaches to get that in different forms. Nature magazine recently had a piece ((Apologies for a post with many references to articles behind a paywall.)) about GM approaches to get insect resistant rice in China. ((Also see this paper by Huang et al. in Science and the critical responses.))

But not everybody agrees. The problem is that some of the major pests occur in large numbers and rely entirely on rice for their life cycle. Strong evolutionary pressure means that these species tend to quickly overcome host plant resistance. In the Nature article, KL Heong calls pest-resistant GM crops a short-term fix for long-term problems caused by crop monoculture and overuse of broad-spectrum pesticides. “Pests thrive where biodiversity is at peril, instead of genetic engineering, why don’t we engineer the ecology by increasing biodiversity?”

This week, in a letter to the editor of Nature, Settele, Biesmeijer and Bommarco also make a case for ecological engineering: the design and construction of ecosystems.

The nice thing about tropical rice is that there is not that much engineering needed to keep pests under control. This is my understanding of how it works:

  • Rule #1: do not kill the beneficial insects (avoid pesticides).
  • Rule #2: help the beneficial insects. For example, by providing ample organic matter to fields, you increase the population of harmless insects and with that the population of generalist predators (see below).
  • Rule #3, maintain a diverse landscape around the rice fields to support useful insects, such as parasitoids that, as adults, need nectar from flowering plants.

William Settle and colleagues studied rice bugs in Indonesia and summed their findings up like this:

By increasing organic matter in test plots we could boost populations of detritivores and plankton-feeders, and in turn significantly boost the abundance of generalist predators. We also demonstrated the link between early-season natural enemy populations and later-season pest populations by experimentally reducing early-season predator populations with insecticide applications, causing pest populations to resurge later in the season.

Irrigated rice systems support high levels of natural biological control that depends on season long successional processes and interactions among a wide array of species. Our results support the conservation of existing natural biological control through a major reduction in insecticide use, and an increase in habitat heterogeneity.

While it seems obvious that relying on and strengthening ecosystem services is the way to go, this is not what is happening. The brown plant hopper is coming back as a major problem, particularly in Vietnam and China. The response? Breeding & Spray, baby, spray.

It is tricky to generalize about agriculture and pests. There are always exceptions and special circumstances. And what if someone can make a rice plant that is truly immune to stem borers and plant hoppers. Well, some other insects would go after the available resources, but it could certainly be beneficial. Also, the biodiversity of insects in tropical rice fields, such as in Indonesia, is much higher than in China (probably largely because of the general relation between latitude and diversity, but perhaps also because of excessive pesticide use in China). So perhaps biocontrol ecosystem services are not as effective in China as in more tropical areas. We should find out.

And we should get serious about ecological engineering.

And not just in rice. Take this article that appeared in this week’s PNAS. It describes the need for maintaining landscape diversity in the USA, to support aphid control in soybeans by ladybugs.

15 Replies to “Biodiversity and rice pests”

  1. We should definitively get serious about ecological engineering. However, traditional spraying, and breeding-based solutions get producers’ minds into an almost unbreakable paradigm; the best way, perhaps, will be to find a “perfect” formula including the three approaches (ecological engineering, spray, breeding) as a first step in the short -or mid- term. This will at the same time reduce spraying, make use of bred varieties and start introducing ecological engineering to farmers’ minds.

  2. I do not mind going step by step, as long as it is in the right direction. But what I expect to happen is another cycle of pesticide use boom and bust.

  3. Biological control in tropical irrigated rice is extraordinarily robust. The real irony is that the biological control in irrigated rice is beyond what is found in most other crops. The only really damaging pest is the brown planthopper, which outbreaks after the overuse of pesticides. Other pests such as stem borers, which are the target of Bt rice, typically only cause 1-5% yield loss. The outbreak of stem borers is also a sign of the ecosystem collapse.

  4. Yolanda, thanks for your comment, and also what you pointed out by email: that the terrestrial predators are “subsidized” by the aquatic organisms. Fascinating. Just like its effect on soil fertility, it is the life in the water that makes flooded rice so productive and sustainable.

  5. Not only Azolla, but also blue-green algae and other plants that capture carbon and nitrogen. This contribute to soil fertility (I think the algae typically capture 30 kg of nitrogen per ha for each rice crop!), and to the insects that feed on the plants. Their presence sets up the predators (e.g. spiders) that can eat the hoppers when they come in.

  6. Right Robert, the real subsidy to biological control in irrigated rice comes from the water! The timing of all of it is also quite remarkable. The flooding cues the aquatic insects to molt into adults. This results in a outward migration of adults that emerge out of the water. The spiders use the rice plants as fishing places, trying to capture as much of the emerging aquatic insects.

    The shame is that most rice researchers think that irrigated rice is an impaired agroecosystem and the rice needs to be “protected”. The reality is that this is probably the most robust biological control system among annual crops! (Publications will be forthcoming….)

  7. Interesting blog,
    We are doing some research about native trichodermas species of Chile to control botritys in tomatoes. We had good results also in grapes. Next month we should start building a gardenhouse full of sensors conected to the www to measure how the patogenes and the fungees behave in diferent weather conditions.
    If the global weather is changing, we must understand how this will afect pest.

  8. I am an agriculture plant protection research officer in Afghanistan Nangarhar Province. I like to find interesting information about insect and disease of rice.

  9. I’am an Associate Research Scientist at the Agricultural Research Corporation (ARC), WAd Medani, P.o.Box 126 Sudan. A crop protection specialist. I would be greatful if I recieve any literature on “Natural enemies of insect pests of rice”. Thanks.

  10. I am managing director of Renesa Agro Farm, Dinajpur, Bangladesh. i would be greatful if you send me any message or literature on Insect pests and Diseases of Rice of Bangladesh.

    1. Thanks for your comment; unfortunately we do not have the resources to respond. In this respect we are only a clearing house for information supplied by others. See earlier responses in this thread for some ideas.

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