Beneficial organism

Beneficial organism

In agriculture and gardening, a beneficial organism is any organism that benefits the growing process, including insects, arachnids, other animals, plants, bacteria, fungi, viruses, and nematodes. Benefits include pest control, pollination, and maintenance of soil health. The opposite of beneficial organisms are pests, which are organisms deemed detrimental to the growing process.

Beneficial or pest

The distinction between "beneficial" and "pest" is arbitrary, subjectively determined by examining the effect of a particular organism in a specific growing situation.

*Beneficial insects are probably the most common reference. These are insects that are predators of pest insects, also, pollinators, such as bees, that are an integral part of the growth cycle of many crops.

*Many different soil microorganisms are responsible for nutrient recycling (for one, through decomposing plant residues) and other soil building and maintaining activities.Mixed culture of beneficial microorganisms such as photosynthetic bacteria (Rhodopseudomonas sp) lactic acid bacteria (lactobacillus sp.), yeast (saccharomyces sp.) and fermenting fungi (Higa and Wididana, 1991; Higa and Parr, 1994) can positively improve the soil fertility as well as plant productivity.Productive Microbes as a effecive alternative tool for manipulation and managing the overall microbial ecology of complex and divese systems.
*Birds and other animals may by their actions improve conditions in various growing situations, and in such cases are also beneficials.

*Plants that perform positive functions can also be considered beneficials (companion planting is one technique based on principle of beneficial plants).

Increasingly certain species of insects are managed and used to intervene where natural pollination or biological control is insufficient, usually due to human disturbance of the balance of nature.

Issues

In agriculture, controversy surrounds the concept of beneficial insects. Much of this has to do with the effect of agrichemicals, like insecticides, herbicides and large quantities of synthetic fertilizers, on what are considered beneficials. Citing the reduction or elimination of various organisms as a side effect of agrichemical-based farming, some argue that critical damage is being done to the ecosystem, to the point where conventional agriculture is unsustainable. For example, if bee populations are reduced by insecticides aimed at other pests, pollination is inhibited and crops don't appear. If soil microorganisms are killed off, natural soil regeneration is inhibited, and reliance on mechanical and chemical inputs to keep the soil viable is increased. The longer term impact of these conditions has not been determined. Commercial ventures currently exist to provide pollinators and biological pest control.

ee also

*Integrated Pest Management

External links

* http://www.pollinator.info/beneficials/beneficial.htm - beneficial insect information and vendors.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Beneficial acclimation hypothesis — The Beneficial Acclimation Hypothesis is the physiological hypothesis that acclimating to a particular environment (particularly thermal) provides an organism with fitness advantages in that environment. First formally defined and tested by… …   Wikipedia

  • Multigenomic organism — Multigenomic organisms are plants or animals that have symbiotic relationships with other organisms that are necessary for the survival of both, but that differ in their genome such that they are considered separate species. For example, what is… …   Wikipedia

  • Aerobic organism — Aerobic and anaerobic bacteria can be identified by growing them in a liquid culture: 1: Obligate aerobic bacteria gather at the top of the test tube in order to absorb maximal amount of oxygen. 2: Obligate anaerobic bacteria gather at the bottom …   Wikipedia

  • Anaerobic organism — Aerobic and anaerobic bacteria can be identified by growing them in liquid culture: 1: Obligate aerobic (oxygen needing) bacteria gather at the top of the test tube in order to absorb maximal amount of oxygen. 2: Obligate anaerobic bacteria… …   Wikipedia

  • Pest (organism) — A pest is an organism which has characteristics that are regarded by humans as injurious or unwanted. This is most often because it causes damage to agriculture through feeding on crops or parasitising livestock, such as codling moth on apples,… …   Wikipedia

  • soil organism — ▪ biology  any organism inhabiting the soil during part or all of its life. Soil organisms, which range in size from microscopic cells that digest decaying organic material to small mammals that live primarily on other soil organisms, play an… …   Universalium

  • полезный организм — — [http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en] EN beneficial organism Any pollinating insect, or any pest predator, parasite, pathogen or other biological control agent which functions naturally or as part of an integrated… …   Справочник технического переводчика

  • Lactobacillus rhamnosus — Taxobox color = lightgrey name = Lactobacillus rhamnosus regnum = Bacteria divisio = Firmicutes classis = Bacilli ordo = Lactobacillales familia = Lactobacillaceae genus = Lactobacillus species = L. rhamnosus binomial = Lactobacillus rhamnosus… …   Wikipedia

  • Evolution — This article is about evolution in biology. For other uses, see Evolution (disambiguation). For a generally accessible and less technical introduction to the topic, see Introduction to evolution. Part of a series on …   Wikipedia

  • Mutation — For other uses, see Mutation (disambiguation). Part of the Biology series on Evolution …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”