Pesticide and Environmental Update
Foreign
Herbivores May Be Key
to Curbing Invasive Weeds
Joint research with scientists in Argentina, Australia and China could
lead to discovery of new biological control agents for several exotic
weeds plaguing Florida and other U.S. states. Some of the worst offenders
are hydrilla, Brazilian pepper, Chinese tallow and Australian pine. These
and other aggressive invasive weeds occupy diverse habitats and cause many
environmental problems, especially a decrease in biodiversity within
infested areas.
Entomologist Greg Wheeler and colleagues at the Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) Invasive Plant Research Laboratory in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
have been focusing on this growing problem in the United States. ARS is
the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.
The Fort Lauderdale scientists have been collaborating with
counterparts at the ARS South American Biological Control Laboratory in
Hurlingham, Argentina, and the ARS Australian Biological Control
Laboratory in Indooroopilly, Australia, as well as with China's Academy of
Science.
Together, the researchers are conducting extensive field surveys to
discover herbivorous insects and mites that feed on the invasive weeds in
their native ranges. The researchers have recovered many promising new
candidate biological control agents, including weevil, thrip, psyllid,
moth and mite species. Several are undergoing--or have
completed--preliminary testing to determine their safety for U.S. release.
One, the aquatic moth Paracymoriza vagalis, is a promising hydrilla
biological control agent from Indonesia. Protected from predators in dense
plant material, the moth's larvae can survive submersion for extended
periods while feeding on the weed's underwater portions.
Other potential biocontrols include a South American weevil, Omolabus
piceus, which may be effective against Brazilian pepper, and a possibly
safe and host-specific insect, a leaf- rolling weevil called Apoderus
bicallosicollis, which consumes vast quantities of Chinese tallow leaves.
Wheeler has been invited to report these biological control findings at
the SICONBIOL (Brazilian Society for Biocontrol) in Brasilia, Brazil, June
30-July 4. This year's symposium theme, "Innovate to Preserve
Life," will focus on the development and application of new
biological control technologies and strategies, especially on progress
being made in demonstrating the outstanding potential of certain
herbivorous candidates.
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