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1. Preface Heikki Hokkanen & Yulin Gao Basic concepts 2. Improving the efficacy of biological control by ecostacking Heikki Hokkanen 3. Integrative biological control approaches in Chinese agriculture Yulin Gao Biodiversity enhancement for improving biological control 4. Perennial wildflower strips to enhance natural enemies of insect pests in Belgium, Severin Hatt, University of Lige, Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, TERRA-Agriculture, Belgium 5. Flower strips for ecosytem services in Switzerland, Felix Herzog, Agroscope, Zurich Switzerland 6. Enhancement of natural control functioning of rice insect pests by manipulating biodiversity in rice-based ecosystems, Zhongxian Lv, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou, China 7. Cover crops enhance biological control of insect pests in apple orchards in China, Yi Yu, Institute of plant protection, Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Jinan, China 8. Enhancement of natural control function in aphids by intercropping and infochemical releasers in wheat ecosystem, Yong Liu, Department of plant protection, Shandong Agricultural University, Jinan, China 9. Crop diversity and disease control, Chengyun Li and Youyong Zhu, Yunnan Agricultural University, China Specific techniques to enhance ecostacking 10. Ecological enhancement of arthropod natural enemy application in biological control. Su Wang, Institute of Plant & Environment Protection, Beijing Academy of Agriculture & Forestry Sciences, Beijing, 100097, China 11. Chemical ecology of egg parasitoids in crop protection, Stefano Colazza, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy 12. Current knowledge on the migratory moth Autographa gamma as basis for future chemo-ecological research, Paul Becher and Santosh Revadi, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden 13. The development of biocontrol products and their applications in the field, Tzu-Pi Huang, China 14. Effects of insecticides on pollen beetles (Brassicogethes aeneus) and their tersilochine parasitoids in Germany, Meike Brandes and Udo Heimbach, Julius Kuehn Institute, Germany 15. How microbiome approaches can assist market development for biological control. Gabriele Berg & Tomislav Cernava, Graz University of Technology, Institute of Environmental Biotechnology, Graz, Austria 16. Successful use of entomopathogenic nematodes to control a defoliator outbreak in an environmentally sensitive area, Hokkanen Heikki and Menzler-Hokkanen, Ingeborg, University of Helsinki, Finland 17. Bees and medicinal plants – prospective for entomovectoring, Ekaterina Kozuharova, Ina Aneva, Katerina Bogacheva-Milkoteva, Hristo Valchev, Dave Goulson, Bulgaria/UK 18. (a possible topic by) Georg Heimpel et al., USA Climate change implications 19. Night warming on predator-prey interactions: implications for biological control: Gang Ma and Chunsen Ma, State Key Laboratory for biology of plant diseases and insect pests, Institute of Plant Protection, CAAS, Beijing, China 20. Landscape-level drivers of biocontrol and case study from local to regional scale under climate change in China, Fang Ouyang , China 21. Spotted Wing Drosophila-blueberry interactions, Paul Becher, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden Conclusion and outlook 22. Integrative biological control and ecostacking: recipe for success. Yulin Gao, Heikki Hokkanen, Ingeborg Menzler-Hokkanen




