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      Pesticide-Induced Stress in Arthropod Pests for Optimized Integrated Pest Management Programs.

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          Abstract

          More than six decades after the onset of wide-scale commercial use of synthetic pesticides and more than fifty years after Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, pesticides, particularly insecticides, arguably remain the most influential pest management tool around the globe. Nevertheless, pesticide use is still a controversial issue and is at the regulatory forefront in most countries. The older generation of insecticide groups has been largely replaced by a plethora of novel molecules that exhibit improved human and environmental safety profiles. However, the use of such compounds is guided by their short-term efficacy; the indirect and subtler effects on their target species, namely arthropod pest species, have been neglected. Curiously, comprehensive risk assessments have increasingly explored effects on nontarget species, contrasting with the majority of efforts focused on the target arthropod pest species. The present review mitigates this shortcoming by hierarchically exploring within an ecotoxicology framework applied to integrated pest management the myriad effects of insecticide use on arthropod pest species.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Annu. Rev. Entomol.
          Annual review of entomology
          1545-4487
          0066-4170
          2016
          : 61
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Departamento de Entomologia, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Viçosa, Minas Gerais 36570-900, Brazil; email: guedes@ufv.br.
          [2 ] Department of Crop Protection, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium; email: guy.smagghe@ugent.be.
          [3 ] Puyallup Research and Extension Center, Washington State University, Puyallup, Washington 98371-4900; email: starkj@wsu.edu.
          [4 ] French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA), Université Nice Sophia Antipolis, CNRS, UMR 1355-7254, Institut Sophia Agrobiotech, 06903 Sophia Antipolis, France; email: nicolas.desneux@sophia.inra.fr.
          Article
          10.1146/annurev-ento-010715-023646
          26473315
          b94291b0-c80d-47b6-966e-574f84d74d95
          History

          behavioral avoidance,dominance shift,ecological backlashes,pest outbreaks,pest resurgence,pesticide-induced hormesis

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