Bats Can Help Protect Rice Farms Against Pests

Translator

Editor

Jumat, 18 April 2014 08:48 WIB

TEMPO/Hariandi Hafid

TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Bats that prey on a major rice pest in Thailand could save paddy harvests worth millions of dollars and help contribute to better food security, scientists say in a paper published in Biological Conservation recently (March), as reported by Environmental News Network.


Using data from a previous study and their own field survey, the scientists came up with a value of the predation of the wrinkle-lipped bat (Tadarida plicata) on the white-backed planthopper (Sogatella furcifera), a migratory insect pest in Asia which feeds on rice shoots.


The scientists calculated that each wrinkle-lipped bat consumes about 1,130 white-backed planthoppers daily. With a population of almost eight million, this bat species may prevent paddy losses of nearly 2,900 tonnes per year worth US$1.2 million in export value, enough to feed 26,000 people for a year.


Thomas Cherico Wanger, lead author of the paper and a tropical ecologist at University of Göttingen in Germany, suggests that Thai rice farmers can recruit bats in their fields by providing roosting boxes.


"The model shows that 300 bats in each roosting box can protect almost 700 kilograms of rice per year," Wanger tells SciDev.Net.


Bats have yet to be considered as a significant pest control agent in agriculture, according to Wantana Srirattanasak, senior entomologist of Thailand’s Department of Rice. "Our farmers have never thought of using bats as biological control agents," she says.


A year-long survey in 2005 reported that planthoppers made up almost 30 per cent of the diet of wrinkled-lipped bats. Working from this survey, Wanger and his team built a model to "quantify the amount of rice that bats protect when they feed on planthoppers."


Combining data from the literature with their field observations, the scientists used the model to estimate the number of white-backed planthoppers consumed by all the wrinkled-lipped bats in Thailand. They then estimated the amount of rice harvest saved due to the predation of these planthoppers.


But models simplify nature based on assumptions that might be wrong, Wanger warns, adding that it is crucial to "compile good data" and "to indicate the level of error that comes with an estimate."


"The model has merits as a thought experiment," says Geoff Gurr, applied ecology professor at Charles Sturt University in Australia.


But Gurr, who has been working on the biological control of planthoppers with arthropod predators, notes that only one field survey was used to estimate the bats'’ predation of the planthoppers.



ENN | SCIDEVNET | YHL




Related News

Deforestation Affects Four Key Animals in Aceh, Including Sumatran Elephants

57 hari lalu

Deforestation Affects Four Key Animals in Aceh, Including Sumatran Elephants

Aceh Environment and Forestry Office (DLHK) said that deforestation affected 5.3 thousand hectares of Aceh's forests during the 2021-2022 period.

Read More

New Species of Amazon Anaconda, World's Largest Snake, Discovered

2 Maret 2024

New Species of Amazon Anaconda, World's Largest Snake, Discovered

Researchers in the Amazon have discovered the world's largest snake species - an enormous green anaconda - in Ecuador's rainforest.

Read More

Solo Safari Zoo: Tickets, Opening Hours, Facilities

19 Februari 2024

Solo Safari Zoo: Tickets, Opening Hours, Facilities

Solo Safari Zoo is a magnificent nature-based tourism situated on nearly 13.9 hectares of natural area in Surakarta, Central Java.

Read More

Gorilla at Jakarta Ragunan Zoo Throws Stick at Visitors; Management Explains

3 Januari 2024

Gorilla at Jakarta Ragunan Zoo Throws Stick at Visitors; Management Explains

Footage of a gorilla throwing wooden sticks at visitors at Ragunan Zoo, South Jakarta, has gone viral on social media.

Read More

Taman Safari Animal Curator: 'Wild Animals Can't Be Kept as Pets'

10 Agustus 2023

Taman Safari Animal Curator: 'Wild Animals Can't Be Kept as Pets'

Keeping wild animals at home has long been a trend among celebrities, sparking controversy.

Read More

Athens Zoo Fights to Save Tiger Cub Found in Garbage

18 Maret 2023

Athens Zoo Fights to Save Tiger Cub Found in Garbage

Greek veterinarians are fighting to save a white tiger cub abandoned in a rubbish bin at an Athens zoo, believed to be a victim of the illegal trade.

Read More

Obsolete Law is Costing Indonesian Wildlife

2 Maret 2023

Obsolete Law is Costing Indonesian Wildlife

When Indonesian prosecutors went after the leader of an illegal wildlife syndicate, they relied on a relatively new law to seek a prison sentence.

Read More

Ragunan Zoo to Revamp Cages, Create Zonation of Rp130bn

18 Februari 2023

Ragunan Zoo to Revamp Cages, Create Zonation of Rp130bn

Ragunan Zoo management submits the budget for cages beautification and creating zonation of Rp130 billion to Jakarta Provincial Government for 2023.

Read More

Cities Can Be Safe Havens for Endangered Plants and Animals

27 Oktober 2022

Cities Can Be Safe Havens for Endangered Plants and Animals

Creating better connections between humans and nature is the first step to bringing back endangered animals into our cities.

Read More

Experts Call for New Vision to Guide Protection of Endangered Species in Africa

25 Juni 2022

Experts Call for New Vision to Guide Protection of Endangered Species in Africa

The international community should rally behind a new vision to guide the protection of endangered species that inhabit Africa, experts say.

Read More