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Contents
Science Update
Reunion With Weevils Could Sink a Water Weed
South American weevils might help stop the spread of salvinia, an invasive
water weed also native to that continent. The Cyrtobagous salviniae
weevils might reduce the need for chemical controls against salvinia in
warm-weather areas of the United States. They have done just that in some other
countries plagued by the weed, including Australia, South Africa, and India.
Last summer, scientists with ARS and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
released hundreds of the tiny black weevils in a salvinia-infested pond, lake,
and reservoir near Jasper, Texas.
Leaves of the weed, Salvinia molesta, can form mats that crowd out
native plants and ruin water bodies for fish and wildlife. The mats can also
interfere with flood control, irrigation, fishing, swimming, boating, and water
skiing. Unchecked, salvinia can double its extent in a few days.
The weevils reproduce quicklyabout every 3 weeksand mainly
attack the plant's buds. Scientists will monitor the weevils to determine if
they can adapt to the climatea crucial factor in gauging their potential
as a natural weed-eater.
Ted D. Center, USDA-ARS
Aquatic
Weed Control Research Laboratory, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida; phone (954)
475-0541, ext. 103.
New Mosquito Trap
Mosquitoes and other biting insects are being lured into a new trap that
kills them without using pesticide. ARS scientists developed and field-tested
the trap under a cooperative research and development agreement with BioSensory
Insect Control Corp., of Willimantic, Connecticut.
The Dragonfly trap attracts the insects with a patented blend of carbon
dioxide, heat, and octenolall natural chemical cues mosquitoes use to
find a blood meal. But when mosquitoes or other biting insects enter the trap
intent on a human snack, an electronic pulse kills them and they fall into a
removable tray. Conventional bug-zapping traps splatter bug bits every which
way. The attractants are registered with the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency for controlling mosquitoes and other biting insects.
Daniel L. Kline,
USDA-ARS Center for Medical,
Agricultural, and Veterinary Entomology, Gainesville, Florida; phone (352)
374-5933.
Biotech Blooms for the Floral Industry
Disease-resistant lilies, gladioli, and other cut flowers may be available
to commercial growers in a few years. Using biotechnology, ARS scientists are
trying to produce what conventional breeding hasn't: commercial cultivars that
resist viruses that threaten the $15 billion U.S. floriculture industry.
An example is cucumber mosaic virus, spread by aphids while they suck the
plants' sap. Insecticide is an available option, but it can be costly or harm
flower-friendly bugs. As an alternative, the ARS research team genetically
engineered 30 lines of gladiolus with built-in defenses. About 250 of the
yellow- and pink-flowered plants grow in a greenhouse. Scientists have
intentionally challenged the plants with virus to find out whether their new
genes can foil it. The virus can cause streaking of petals, leaf spots, and
other unsightly symptoms.
The test plants are the first gladioli to be engineered using a gene gun, a
device that fires bits of antiviral DNA into cultures of gladiolus cells.
Scientists coaxed the cells to develop into whole plants. The new genes include
two viral coat proteins and an enzyme.
If the gene-engineering approach proves reliable and effective, commercial
growers could develop the plants into new commercial varieties.
Kathryn Kamo, USDA-ARS
Floral and Nursery Crops
Research Unit, Beltsville, Maryland; phone (301) 504-5350.
"Science Update" was published in the
November 1999 issue of
Agricultural Research magazine.
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