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Contents
Science Update
Anti-Mite Gel Gets Commercial License
A new gel treatment invented by Agricultural Research Service scientists in
Maryland has been licensed to a private firm, moving the product closer to
helping beekeepers stop varroa mites. The mites cause economic losses for
beekeepers, as well as for U.S. farmers who depend on honey bees to pollinate
$10 billion worth of crops. The struggle against the mites became more
difficult once they began developing resistance to the standard control,
fluvalinate. But ARS has now licensed a gel containing formic acid to
Betterbee, Inc., of Greenwich, New York. In field tests, formic acid gel killed
up to 84 percent of varroa mites. It also killed 100 percent of tracheal mites.
Betterbee must obtain U.S. Environment Protection Agency approval before
selling the product to beekeepers. They would simply place a small, sliced-open
plastic bag of the gel inside a beehive. The formic acid slowly evaporates,
leaving a harmless residue. Hachiro
Shimanuki, USDA-ARS Bee Research Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland; phone
(301) 504-8975.
Ag Info Network To Expand
Twenty-one U.S. and Canadian universities and other organizations aim to
expand the global reach of AgNIC, the Agriculture Network Information Center,
on the World Wide Web. Their goal: make AgNIC the world's most comprehensive,
helpful, and well-used agricultural information resource. It could help people
around the world find reliable, fast sources of agricultural informatione
specially during drought or other natural disaster. Visitors to AgNIC at
http://www.agnic.org can find
links to more than 900 databases, a contact list of specialists, a calendar of
conferences, and other agricultural information. A prototype went on-line in
1995 through efforts of Cornell and Iowa State Universities, the Universities
of Arizona and Nebraska at Lincoln, and the National Agricultural Library,
which is part of ARS. AgNIC members plan to continue expanding the subject-area
coverage and attract new members. Organizations interested in joining AgNIC can
contact Melanie Gardner, USDA-ARS National Agricultural Library, 10301
Baltimore Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705-2351; phone (301) 504-6780.
Reliable Pig Virus Test
A new genetic test quickly distinguishes a damaging pig virus from a
harmless strain of the same virus used in a vaccine. The virus causes PRRS
porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome. PRRS is one of the world's most
costly swine diseases. It causes late-term fetal deaths, abortions, weakness in
newborn pigs, and severe respiratory disease in young pigs. When an outbreak
occurs, lab diagnosticians have difficulty differentiating disease-causing
field strains from the vaccine strain. But the new test developed by ARS
researchers in Iowa pinpoints genetic markers in both field and vaccine
strains. The test is accurate and takes only 2 days to report results after the
virus is isolated. ARS and NOBL/Boehringer Ingelheim Laboratories of Sioux
Center, Iowa, evaluated the test under a cooperative research and development
agreement. In a 1995 study of 286 herds, PRRS virus previously known as mystery
pig disease was found in 60 percent of the unvaccinated herds tested.
William L. Mengeling,
USDA-ARS National Animal Disease
Center, Ames, Iowa; phone (515) 239-8254.
20-Year Test Finds Sewage Sludge Safe, Beneficial
Growing crops with municipal sewage sludge is safe and beneficial to crops
and soil, according to a 20-year study in Minnesota. A common concern has been
that sludge, or biosolids, will put toxic heavy metals into food crops. The
study indicates this won't happen if biosolids are used correctly. Each fall,
researchers injected a liquid suspension of sludge into the soil of fields used
to grow corn and reed canary grass. Crop yields were slightly higher with the
biosolids than with commercial fertilizer. Importantly, no extra metals showed
up in the corn or grass except slightly higher levels of zinc. The zinc well
within safety guidelines would be beneficial as a dietary nutrient. The
biosolids also help return carbon to the soil. By contrast, incinerating or
composting sludge results in loss of carbon to the atmosphere as carbon
dioxide. Biosolids contain a slow-release form of nitrogen less likely to be
lost to surface water or groundwater. Like commercial fertilizers, however,
biosolids should be applied only at rates that allow for nutrient uptake by
crops. Robert H. Dowdy, USDA-ARS
Soil and
Water Management Research Unit, St. Paul, Minnesota; phone (612) 625-7058.
"Science Update " was published in the November 1998 issue
of Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to see this
issue's table of contents.
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