Artículo
ecological
Fecha
2015-11-03Resumen
Crop pest and disease incidences at plot scale vary as a result of landscape effects. Two main effects can be distinguished. First, landscape context provides habitats of
variable quality for pests, pathogens, and beneficial and vector organisms. Second, the
movements of these organisms are dependent on the connectivity status of the landscape.
Most of the studies focus on indirect effects of landscape context on pest abundance through their predators and parasitoids, and only a few on direct effects on pests and pathogens. Here
we studied three coffee pests and pathogens, with limited or no pressure from host-specific
natural enemies, and with widely varying life histories, to test their relationships with
landscape context: a fungus, Hemileia vastatrix, causal agent of coffee leaf rust; an insect, the
coffee berry borer, Hypothenemus hampei (Coleoptera: Curculionidae); and root-knot
nematodes, Meloidogyne spp. Their incidence was assessed in 29 coffee plots from Turrialba,
Costa Rica. In addition, we characterized the landscape context around these coffee plots in 12
nested circular sectors ranging from 50 to 1500 m in radius. We then performed correlation
analysis between proportions of different land uses at different scales and coffee pest and
disease incidences. We obtained significant positive correlations, peaking at the 150 m radius,
between coffee berry borer abundance and proportion of coffee in the landscape. We also
found significant positive correlations between coffee leaf rust incidence and proportion of
pasture, peaking at the 200 m radius. Even after accounting for plot level predictors of coffee
leaf rust and coffee berry borer through covariance analysis, the significance of landscape
structure was maintained. We hypothesized that connected coffee plots favored coffee berry
borer movements and improved its survival. We also hypothesized that wind turbulence,
produced by low-wind-resistance land uses such as pasture, favored removal of coffee leaf rust
spore clusters from host surfaces, resulting in increased epidemics. In contrast, root-knot
nematode population density was not correlated to landscape context, possibly because
nematodes are almost immobile in the soil. We propose fragmenting coffee plots with forest
corridors to control coffee berry borer movements between coffee plots without favoring
coffee leaf rust dispersal