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This text provides readers with an in-depth exploration of how
biological control functions and how it can be safely employed to
solve pest problems and enhance nature conservation. It covers the
principles behind biological control techniques and their
implementation, and incorporates practical examples from the
biological control of a variety of pests. It contains detailed
chapters on conserving natural enemies through environmental
management, importation of new natural enemies for control of
pests, augmentation of natural enemies through rearing and release,
and the development and application of pathogens and biopesticides.
Nearly twenty years have passed since the publishing of a
broadly-based texthook on hiolog ical control (Huffaker and
Messinger 1976). In the interim, other works on biological control
have been either briefer treatments (DeBach and Rosen 1991), or
collections of essays on selected topics (Waage and Greathead 1986;
Mackauer and Ehler 1990). Our text has been written to fill what we
believe is a need for a well-integrated, broadly-based text of
appropriate length and degree of technical detail for teaching a
one semester upper level course in hiological control. We have
attempted to focus on principles and concepts, rather than on
biological control of particular taxa or hiological control by
particular kinds of natural enemies. Therefore, for example, the
reader will find the material on biological control of weeds
integrated with biological control of insects and mites into
chapters on principles, techniques, and applications rather than
presented separately. Only biological control of plant pathogens is
addressed independently, an appraoch made necessary by the many
special features and concepts in plant pathogen biological
control."
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