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Commentary

Pest pressure relates to similarity of crops and native plants

George G. Kennedy and View ORCID ProfileAnders S. Huseth
PNAS November 24, 2020 117 (47) 29260-29262; first published November 9, 2020; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2020945117
George G. Kennedy
aDepartment of Entomology and Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695
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  • For correspondence: gkennedy@ncsu.edu
Anders S. Huseth
aDepartment of Entomology and Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695
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  • ORCID record for Anders S. Huseth

See related content:

  • Phylogenetic escape from pests reduces pesticides on some crop plants
    - Oct 12, 2020
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  • pesticides
  • pest management
  • phylogenetic ecology
  • agricultural ecology

Since the Green Revolution, scientists have documented countless unanticipated consequences of widespread pesticide use in agriculture. These consequences are balanced by the growing necessity to manage agricultural pests. The trade-offs have motivated research to produce inexpensive and accessible food while simultaneously improving the sustainability of agriculture from field to fork. Although decades of research inform our understanding of relationships between pests, crops, and pesticides, the general systemic drivers and patterns of crop-specific pesticide use remain unclear. Understanding fundamental ecological factors that motivate pesticide use on crops is a key knowledge gap that perpetuates this ongoing dependence on pesticides. Pearse and Rosenheim (1) study several general drivers of pest pressure and associated pesticide use in California, one of the most intensive agricultural production regions worldwide. Because of the immense crop diversity and accessible data about the pesticide inputs used on those crops, the authors are able use this complex agricultural system as a test bed to ask whether pest pressure and pesticide use on agricultural crops are related to the evolutionary distance between important crop plants and their native relatives growing in noncrop areas of California (1).

This study (1) builds on a growing body of evidence that the phylogenetic structure of plant communities can have predictable impacts on pests and diseases of plants in managed and natural systems (2⇓⇓–5). Pearse and Rosenheim examine economic crop value and evolutionary history to describe the numbers of arthropod pest and crop pathogen species affecting each crop in the study region. To do this, they investigate 93 major annual and perennial Californian crops (>600-ha average area) and link economic crop value, plant community ecology, and phylogenetic relationships to describe …

↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: gkennedy{at}ncsu.edu.

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References

  1. ↵
    1. I. S. Pearse,
    2. J. A. Rosenheim
    , Phylogenetic escape from pests reduces pesticides on some crop plants. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 117, 26849–26853 (2020).
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    1. I. M. Parker et al
    ., Phylogenetic structure and host abundance drive disease pressure in communities. Nature 520, 542–544 (2015).
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    , Phylogenetic and trait similarity to a native species predict herbivory on non-native oaks. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 106, 18097–18102 (2009).
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    1. G. S. Gilbert,
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    , The evolutionary ecology of plant disease: A phylogenetic perspective. Annu. Rev. Phytopathol. 54, 549–578 (2016).
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    ., Evolutionary history predicts high-impact invasions by herbivorous insects. Ecol. Evol. 9, 12216–12230 (2019).
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    1. J. A. Rosenheim,
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    , Variation in pesticide use across crops in California agriculture: Economic and ecological drivers. Sci. Total Environ. 733, 138683 (2020).
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    1. S. B. Hill,
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    , Evidence that phylogenetically novel non-indigenous plants experience less herbivory. Oecologia 161, 581–590 (2009).
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    1. K. R. Young
    , Biogeography of the Anthropocene: Domestication. Prog. Phys. Geogr. 40, 161–174 (2016).
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    1. J. Cavender-Bares,
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    , The merging of community ecology and phylogenetic biology. Ecol. Lett. 12, 693–715 (2009).
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  10. ↵
    1. I. S. Pearse,
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    , Predicting novel herbivore–plant interactions. Oikos 122, 1554–1564 (2013).
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    1. US Department of Agriculture - National Agricultural Statistics Service
    , 2019 cultivated layer. https://www.nass.usda.gov/Research_and_Science/Cropland/Release/index.php. Accessed 18 October 2020.

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Pest pressure relates to similarity of crops and native plants
George G. Kennedy, Anders S. Huseth
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Nov 2020, 117 (47) 29260-29262; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2020945117

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Pest pressure relates to similarity of crops and native plants
George G. Kennedy, Anders S. Huseth
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Nov 2020, 117 (47) 29260-29262; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2020945117
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