A general model of hormesis in biological systems and its application to pest management

J R Soc Interface. 2019 Aug 30;16(157):20190468. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2019.0468. Epub 2019 Aug 21.

Abstract

Hormesis, a phenomenon whereby exposure to high levels of stressors is inhibitory but low (mild, sublethal and subtoxic) doses are stimulatory, challenges decision-making in the management of cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, nutrition and ecotoxicology. In the latter, increasing amounts of a pesticide may lead to upsurges rather than declines of pests, ecological paradoxes that are difficult to predict. Using a novel re-formulation of the Ricker population equation, we show how interactions between intervention strengths and dose timings, dose-response functions and intrinsic factors can model such paradoxes and hormesis. A model with three critical parameters revealed hormetic biphasic dose and dose timing responses, either in a J-shape or an inverted U-shape, yielding a homeostatic change or a catastrophic shift and hormetic effects in many parameter regions. Such effects were enhanced by repeated pulses of low-level stimulations within one generation at different dose timings, thereby reducing threshold levels, maximum responses and inhibition. The model provides insights into the complex dynamics of such systems and a methodology for improved experimental design and analysis, with wide-reaching implications for understanding hormetic effects in ecology and in medical and veterinary treatment decision-making. We hypothesized that the dynamics of a discrete generation pest control system can be determined by various three-parameter spaces, some of which reveal the conditions for occurrence of hormesis, and confirmed this by fitting our model to both hormetic data from the literature and to a non-hormetic dataset on pesticidal control of mirid bugs in cotton.

Keywords: Apolygus lucorum; Ricker equation; complex dynamics; ecological paradox; pest control; stability.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Gossypium / parasitology
  • Heteroptera / drug effects
  • Hormesis / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Models, Biological*
  • Pest Control / methods*
  • Pesticides / pharmacology

Substances

  • Pesticides