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Beneficial insects are used in biological control programs
in environmentally sound and effective ways to stop unwanted insect
pests or other organisms from affecting agriculture. These insects are
mass-reared to ensure that a steady supply is available for researchers
and farmers.
But what if these beneficial insects become infected with
diseaseas happened recently with two species of weevil? They're
too valuable to kill or let die, and they're in demand to control harmful
pests.
ARS's Invasive Plant
Research Laboratory in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, screens beneficial
insects for use against invasive, nonnative plants. James J. Becnel,
an entomologist at ARS's Center for Medical, Agricultural, and Veterinary
Entomology in Gainesville, Florida, and Theresa Rebelo, a postdoctoral
researcher from Portugal, worked with the laboratory to determine what
was infecting the beneficial weevils.
They suspected a newly discovered microsporidian species
was harming two closely related South American weevils (Neochetina
eichhorniae and N. bruchi) used since the 1970s to control
water hyacinth, an exotic aquatic weed clogging waterways and wildlife
habitats. The research team determined that the microsporidia were decreasing
weevil survival rates by 30 percent and reducing reproductive capacity
by 72 percent in one weevil species and 62 percent in the other.
This demonstrates the types of problems that can occur
when organisms used in biological control programs are sidelined with
disease. If it's determined to be economically practical to treat weevil
colonies, researchers will have to develop a method to cure them of
the disease.
"There are different approaches to treating diseases
in beneficial insects," Becnel explains. "Often, combining
treatments works best to extend the window of opportunity for the therapy
to take hold in a colony."
The Pasteur method is one way to eliminate disease in
insect colonies when infection rates are low. This method screens out
infected eggs and adults, leaving only healthy ones for the colonies.
Another method uses heat shock to cure insects of disease, an effective
tool for eliminating some microsporidian species but not others. Cold
treatments have also been used because the healthier insects in a colony
can develop more quickly than infected ones when exposed to low temperatures.
They can then be separated from sick ones.
Several different approaches to controlling disease have
been studied in Gainesville. Nosema disease of parasitoids is
a serious problem affecting insect integrated pest management programs.
The disease shortens the life of parasitoids and reduces their fertility
and fitness.
Two parasitic wasp species used to target house and stable
flies were infected by a microsporidium in the Nosema genus.
Becnel, another ARS entomologist with the ARS Mosquito and Fly Research
Unit, Christopher J. Geden, and cooperators found a way to treat female
wasps' food with different drug therapies, which lessens the disease's
spread to their offspring. This treatment was very effective when combined
with short exposure of infected parasitoids to high temperatures.By
Jim Core,
Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Arthropod Pests of Animals
and Humans, an ARS National Program (#104) described on the World Wide
Web at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
James
J. Becnel and Christopher
Geden are in the USDA-ARS Mosquito
and Fly Research Unit, Center for Medical, Agricultural, and Veterinary
Entomology, 1600 S.W. 23rd Drive, Gainesville, FL 32608; (352) 374-5961
[Becnel], (352) 374-5919 [Geden], fax (352) 374-5966.
"Managing Disease in Beneficial Insects" was published
in the April
2004 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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