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Dive into the research topics where Roel Uyttenbroeck is active.

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Featured researches published by Roel Uyttenbroeck.


Arthropod-plant Interactions | 2017

Effect of flower traits and hosts on the abundance of parasitoids in perennial multiple species wildflower strips sown within oilseed rape (Brassica napus) crops

Séverin Hatt; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Thomas Chevalier Mendes Lopes; Ju Lian Chen; Julien Piqueray; Arnaud Monty; Frédéric Francis

Reducing the use of insecticides is an important issue for agriculture today. Sowing wildflower strips along field margins or within crops represents a promising tool to support natural enemy populations in agricultural landscapes and, thus, enhance conservation biological control. However, it is important to sow appropriate flower species that attract natural enemies efficiently. The presence of prey and hosts may also guide natural enemies to wildflower strips, potentially preventing them from migrating into adjacent crops. Here, we assessed how seven flower traits, along with the abundance of pollen beetles (Meligethes spp., Coleoptera: Nitidulidae) and true weevils (Ceutorhynchus spp., Coleoptera: Curculionidae), affect the density of parasitoids of these two coleopterans in wildflower strips sown in an oilseed rape field in Gembloux (Belgium). Only flower traits, not host (i.e. pollen beetles and true weevils) abundance, significantly affected the density of parasitoids. Flower colour, ultraviolet reflectance and nectar availability were the main drivers affecting parasitoids. These results demonstrate how parasitoids of oilseed rape pests react to flower cues under field conditions. Similar analyses on the pests and natural enemies of other crops are expected to help to develop perennial flower mixtures able to enhance biological control throughout a rotation system.


Insects | 2018

Flower Strips in Wheat Intercropping System: Effect on Pollinator Abundance and Diversity in Belgium

Clara Amy; Grégoire Noël; Séverin Hatt; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Frank Van de Meutter; David Genoud; Frédéric Francis

The decline of pollinators in agricultural areas has been observed for some decades, this being partly due to landscape simplification in intensive agrosystems. Diversifying agricultural landscapes by sowing flower strips within fields could reduce these adverse effects on biodiversity. In this context, the study presented here aimed at assessing and comparing the abundance and diversity of bees (Hymenoptera: Anthophila) and hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) found and visiting flowers in three types of flower strips in Belgium: (i) a mixture of 11 wild flowers, (ii) a monofloral strip of Dimorphoteca pluvialis (Asteraceae) and (iii) a monofloral strip of Camelina sativa (Brassicaceae), where the last two are considered to be intercrops since they are valuable on the market, all sown within a field of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Pollinators were captured with pan traps and by netting in standardised transects from May to July 2017. One-thousand one-hundred and eighty-four individuals belonging to 43 bee species and 18 hoverfly species were collected. Significant differences in hoverfly diversity were found between the different flower strips. The multifloral treatment supported a greater diversity of syrphid species. Various pollinator species visited the different flowers composing the mixture and also D. pluvialis. The pollinator community proved to be predominantly generalist, with the exception of an oligolectic species in Belgium, Andrena nitidiuscula. Moreover, the three tested flower strips were effective in attracting hoverflies, among them natural enemies of insect pests. This study opens new perspectives in the design of intercropping systems with flower strips towards the design of sustainable agro-ecosystems. Improving economic profitability of sowing flower strips could encourage farmers to diversify their agricultural systems and foster conservation biology strategies.


Journal of Asia-pacific Entomology | 2017

Insect fatty acids: A comparison of lipids from three Orthopterans and Tenebrio molitor L. larvae

Aman Paul; Michel Frederich; Rudy Caparros Megido; Taofic Alabi; Priyanka Malik; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Frédéric Francis; Christophe Blecker; Eric Haubruge; Georges Lognay; Sabine Danthine


Landscape and Urban Planning | 2014

Different responses of bees and hoverflies to land use in an urban–rural gradient show the importance of the nature of the rural land use

Hans A. F. Verboven; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Rein Brys; Martin Hermy


Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Société et Environnement | 2016

Grasshoppers as a food source? A review

Aman Paul; Michel Frederich; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Séverin Hatt; Priyanka Malik; Simon Lebecque; Malik Hamaïdia; Krystian Miazek; Dorothée Goffin; Luc Willems; Magali Deleu; Marie-Laure Fauconnier; Aurore Richel; E. De Pauw; Christophe Blecker; Arnaud Monty; Frédéric Francis; Eric Haubruge; Sabine Danthine


European Journal of Entomology | 2017

Do flower mixtures with high functional diversity enhance aphid predators in wildflower strips

Séverin Hatt; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Thomas Chevalier Mendes Lopes; Pierre Mouchon; Julian Chen; Julien Piqueray; Arnaud Monty; Frédéric Francis


Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Société et Environnement | 2016

Pros and cons of flowers strips for farmers. A review

Roel Uyttenbroeck; Séverin Hatt; Aman Paul; Fanny Boeraeve; Julien Piqueray; Frédéric Francis; Sabine Danthine; Michel Frederich; Marc Dufrêne; Bernard Bodson; Arnaud Monty


Agriculture and Agricultural Science Procedia | 2015

Creating Perennial Flower Strips: Think Functional!

Roel Uyttenbroeck; Séverin Hatt; Julien Piqueray; Aman Paul; Bernard Bodson; Frédéric Francis; Arnaud Monty


Agriculture and Agricultural Science Procedia | 2015

Do wildflower strips favor insect pest populations at field margins

Séverin Hatt; Roel Uyttenbroeck; Thomas Chevalier Mendes Lopes; Aman Paul; Sabine Danthine; Bernard Bodson; Julien Piqueray; Arnaud Monty; Frédéric Francis


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2017

Increasing plant functional diversity is not the key for supporting pollinators in wildflower strips

Roel Uyttenbroeck; Julien Piqueray; Séverin Hatt; Grégory Mahy; Arnaud Monty

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