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Home > Current News > 2004

News: 2004

Biocontrol — Bug Used to Control Invasive Plant
Posted: 6/17/04

The unique balance of wildlife and resources is rarely noticed. But when a dense mat of plants covering the surface of a clear dark lake impedes natural water flow and leads to flooding or fish kill, it is noticeable. In the latter case, the plant mat blocks sunlight needed for submerged plants to complete photosynthesis, and the resulting low oxygen conditions affect the wildlife.

Image: BiocontrolConcern about a thick green mat of fresh-water plants on the surface of Cypress Lake near Lake Charles led to the deliberate release there of some insects native to Brazil that like to eat the plants. One hundred of the Florida population of salvinia weevils (Cyrtobagous salviniae ) were released in a one-square meter area of common salvinia (Salvinia minima) covering a large portion of the 55 acre lake in Moss Bluff. The adult weevils are expected to feed on the plant terminals and the larvae, to tunnel into and feed on the rhizomes. “Eventually, the plants will weaken, sink, and die,” according to Seth Johnson, PhD, an entomologist with the LSU Agricultural Center. Johnson oversaw the release of the weevils and is monitoring their progress at 1-2 month intervals.

Many states, including Louisiana, have traditionally used herbicides to reduce the density of such nature-disrupting plant infestations; they are impossible to completely destroy. Such invasive plants reproduce and grow rapidly, requiring regular reapplication of chemicals to keep the infestation under control — a very expensive method of maintaining nature’s balance. Introduction of a natural predator can be less expensive if the predator can survive and control a burgeoning invasive plant population without causing any other disruptions. Biocontrol also reduces expenses when the introduced control species reproduces naturally. Johnson and Kevin Savoie, Louisiana Sea Grant Extension Agent, are hoping this will be the case at Cypress Lake.

This project is one of several sponsored by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and the LSU Agricultural Center to control common salvinia. The same weevil species was released in similar plots at Maurepas Wildlife Management Area last May, and at Lake Henderson, in St James Parish, Maurepas and Joyce Wildlife Management areas in the summer of 2003.

The released insects were grown and studied in a greenhouse at LSU for a period before they were released as a biocontrol measure. A small quantity of Cyrtobagous salviniae was obtained by Johnson from Phillip Tipping of the USDA-Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, last year. Johnson continues to study the weevils in the greenhouse and in the field, and to compare the biocontrol areas to control plots containing no weevils.

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