Czech J. Food Sci., 2000, 18(3):81-85 | DOI: 10.17221/8315-CJFS

Non-linear relationship between food resource exploitation and population density of stored-product pestsOriginal Paper

V. Stejskal

The main current strategies (IPM, HACCP) to control pests in stored food products are based on critical thresholds derived from pest population density. These thresholds usually do not consider cumulative effects of earlier pest infestation although injuries caused by biotic pest organisms to stored food commodities are irreversible. We present conceptual and illustrative models showing that population size indices, in contrast to cumulative (population history) indices, could (i) underestimate critical thresholds if pest population can grow exponentially and (ii) provide incorrect information about the level of stored food damage if pest population density can fluctuate. The importance of entomological food microanalysis and continual "cumulative monitoring" based on trapping is discussed with respect to HACCP and IPM programmes in stored food products.

Keywords: pest populations dynamics; population history; cumulative population indices; thresholds; decision making

Published: June 30, 2000  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago Chicago Notes IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Stejskal V. Non-linear relationship between food resource exploitation and population density of stored-product pests. Czech J. Food Sci. 2000;18(3):81-85. doi: 10.17221/8315-CJFS.
Download citation

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY NC 4.0), which permits non-comercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original publication is properly cited. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.