Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity

Microhabitats capacity to support insect species diversity and persistence were evaluated implementing solitary parasitoids and predatory insects according to different phases of herbicide and chemical fertilizer applications. Two species of the genus Xanthopimpla (Ichneumonidae) and one species of...

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Published in:Sains Malaysiana
Main Author: Ahmad Bukhary A.K.; Hassan A.; Ruslan M.Y.; Idris A.B.; Noor Hisham H.; Muzamil M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2021
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85114019836&doi=10.17576%2fjsm-2021-5008-02&partnerID=40&md5=db6ed5c7014bb720b4fefe8c7cf036c8
id 2-s2.0-85114019836
spelling 2-s2.0-85114019836
Ahmad Bukhary A.K.; Hassan A.; Ruslan M.Y.; Idris A.B.; Noor Hisham H.; Muzamil M.
Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
2021
Sains Malaysiana
50
8
10.17576/jsm-2021-5008-02
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85114019836&doi=10.17576%2fjsm-2021-5008-02&partnerID=40&md5=db6ed5c7014bb720b4fefe8c7cf036c8
Microhabitats capacity to support insect species diversity and persistence were evaluated implementing solitary parasitoids and predatory insects according to different phases of herbicide and chemical fertilizer applications. Two species of the genus Xanthopimpla (Ichneumonidae) and one species of the genus Pompilus (Pompilidae) showed relationships on vegetation-type microhabitats, notably natural weeds, leguminous cover crops, and the beneficial plant Turnera subulata, while two species of the genus Evania (Evaniidae) showed relationships with chipped oil palm trunks. One species from the genus Odontomachus (Formicidae) as an exclusive predatory ant was related to both chipped oil palm trunks and the beneficial plant T. subulata. Xanthopimpla parasitoids exhibited abundance fluctuations difference around natural weeds during herbicide application phases between three- and six-years old oil palm stands, with decreased and increased abundance patterns of the former and the latter, respectively. 18 years old oil palm stand showed increased abundance patterns only along with the different phases of chemical fertilizer applications. The importance of natural weeds diversity, restrictions of leguminous cover crops, frequency of herbicide applications, and the arrangements between beneficial plants and wood-based microhabitats that benefited insect parasitoids and predators were discussed. © 2021 Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. All rights reserved.
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
1266039
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Ahmad Bukhary A.K.; Hassan A.; Ruslan M.Y.; Idris A.B.; Noor Hisham H.; Muzamil M.
spellingShingle Ahmad Bukhary A.K.; Hassan A.; Ruslan M.Y.; Idris A.B.; Noor Hisham H.; Muzamil M.
Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
author_facet Ahmad Bukhary A.K.; Hassan A.; Ruslan M.Y.; Idris A.B.; Noor Hisham H.; Muzamil M.
author_sort Ahmad Bukhary A.K.; Hassan A.; Ruslan M.Y.; Idris A.B.; Noor Hisham H.; Muzamil M.
title Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
title_short Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
title_full Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
title_fullStr Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
title_full_unstemmed Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
title_sort Microhabitats utilization by solitary parasitoids and predatory insects as indicators of oil palm agroecosystem's capacity to support insect species diversity
publishDate 2021
container_title Sains Malaysiana
container_volume 50
container_issue 8
doi_str_mv 10.17576/jsm-2021-5008-02
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85114019836&doi=10.17576%2fjsm-2021-5008-02&partnerID=40&md5=db6ed5c7014bb720b4fefe8c7cf036c8
description Microhabitats capacity to support insect species diversity and persistence were evaluated implementing solitary parasitoids and predatory insects according to different phases of herbicide and chemical fertilizer applications. Two species of the genus Xanthopimpla (Ichneumonidae) and one species of the genus Pompilus (Pompilidae) showed relationships on vegetation-type microhabitats, notably natural weeds, leguminous cover crops, and the beneficial plant Turnera subulata, while two species of the genus Evania (Evaniidae) showed relationships with chipped oil palm trunks. One species from the genus Odontomachus (Formicidae) as an exclusive predatory ant was related to both chipped oil palm trunks and the beneficial plant T. subulata. Xanthopimpla parasitoids exhibited abundance fluctuations difference around natural weeds during herbicide application phases between three- and six-years old oil palm stands, with decreased and increased abundance patterns of the former and the latter, respectively. 18 years old oil palm stand showed increased abundance patterns only along with the different phases of chemical fertilizer applications. The importance of natural weeds diversity, restrictions of leguminous cover crops, frequency of herbicide applications, and the arrangements between beneficial plants and wood-based microhabitats that benefited insect parasitoids and predators were discussed. © 2021 Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. All rights reserved.
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
issn 1266039
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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