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Text Version

  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Table of Contents
  • How Ecologically Based Pest Management Works
  • Principles of Ecologically Based Pest Management
    • Managing Aboveground Habitat
    • Strategies to Enhance Beneficials
    • Innovative Tart Cherry Orchard Systems
    • Farm Feature: No-Till Cover Crops Yield Soil and Pest Benefits
    • Farm Feature: A Toast to Ecological Grape Production
    • Sidebar: Reduce Mowing Frequency to Attract Beneficials
    • Beetle Banks Boost Beneficials
    • Surrounding Crops With Perimeter Fools Pests
    • Table 1: Flowering Plants That Attract Natural Enemies
    • Farm Feature: Resistant Fruit Varieties Reduce Risk
  • Identification Key to Major Beneficials and Pests
  • Managing Soils to Minimize Crop Pests
  • Farm Feature: Triple Threat to Pests: Cover Crops, No-Till, Rotation
  • Beneficial Agents on the Farm
  • Putting it All Together
  • Resources: General Information
  • Printable Version

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SARE's mission is to advance—to the whole of American agriculture—innovations that improve profitability, stewardship and quality of life by investing in groundbreaking research and education. SARE's vision is...

Beetle Banks Boost Beneficials

Beetle Banks Boost Beneficials

predaceous ground beetle

Predaceous ground beetles feed mainly on caterpillars and other insect larvae. Photo by Jack Kelly Clark, Univ. of Calif.

Some grass species can be important for natural enemies. For example, they can provide temperature-moderating overwintering habitats for predaceous ground beetles. In England, researchers established “beetle banks” by sowing earth ridges with orchard grass at the centers of cereal fields. Recreating the qualities of field boundaries that favor high densities of overwintering predators, these banks particularly boosted populations of two ground beetles (Demetrias atricapillus and tachyporus hypnorum), important cereal aphid predators. A 1994 study found that the natural enemies the beetle banks harbored were so cost-effective in preventing cereal aphid outbreaks that pesticide savings outweighed the labor and seed costs required to establish them. The ridges in this study were 1.3 feet high, 5 feet wide and 950 feet long (0.4 m x 1.5 m x 290 m).

For more information, see “Habitat management to conserve natural enemies of arthropod pests in agriculture” (Resources).


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