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USDA, Southern States to Release Fly Against
Fire Ants By Jan
Suszkiw November 15, 2000
CORAL GABLES, Fla., Nov. 15--Phorid flies, parasites that
decapitate imported fire ants, will be mass-reared beginning this spring for
release in fire-ant-infested southern states in a new biological control
initiative.
The campaign pitting fly against fire ant is part of a five-year
program involving the U.S. Department of
Agricultures chief scientific research agency, the
Agricultural Research Service (ARS);
USDAs Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS); and the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services (FDACS). |
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 Fire ant stings raise painful pustules.
 Phorid fly (upper left) selects a victim.
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Through this initiative, well pool resources,
scientific expertise, facilities and personnel to mass-rear phorid flies on a
scale not possible before, said Richard J. Brenner, research leader of
ARS Imported Fire Ant and
Household Insects Unit in Gainesville, Fla.
Starting in spring 2001, the FDACS
Division of Plant Industry (DPI)
will begin mass- rearing Pseudacteon tricuspis, the top candidate of
nearly 20 phorid fly species known to parasitize fire ants. The flies then will
be shipped to field sites for release in southern states including Florida,
Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas,
Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Tennessee. Scientists from APHIS
Gulfport, Miss., facilities will oversee the releases and assist the states in
monitoring field sites.
ARS Gainesville laboratory has been rearing about 1,500
flies per day, a number sufficient only for two or three release sites per
month. Under the initiative, DPIs larger rearing facilities will double
this production in 2001, with additional increases planned in subsequent years.
APHIS methods development personnel in Gainesville also will work with DPI to
improve the fly rearing technology.
Increasing production will be critical to establishing
phorid flies as self-sustaining biological control agents of imported fire
ants, Brenner said. He also noted that this initiative will greatly
expand existing fly release programs established under the National Fire Ant
Strategy, created in 1998 by ARS and the Council of State Governments'
Southern Legislative Conference (SLC).
Details of the initiative will be discussed today at the SLCs
fall meeting at the
Hyatt Regency Hotel in Coral Gables. |
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Background:
 ARS first
test-released phorid flies in
1997.
 In 1998, ARS test-released fire-ant-killing
microbe.

In-depth story on ARS fire-ant research in September
1999 AR
magazine. |
Fire ants originally arrived in the United States from South
America sometime in the 1930s, escaping their natural enemies in the process.
Now established on 310 million acres in the South, the pest causes billions of
dollars in agricultural losses, ecological damage and chemical control costs. A
burning sting and aggressive nature make the pest dangerous to humans,
livestock, pets and wildlife.
Phorid flies are fierce enemies of fire ants. First, a female
fly injects an egg into the fire ants body. The larva that hatches
burrows into the ants head, where it grows and eventually releases
enzymes that cause the ant head to fall off. Inside the decapitated head, the
larva pupates and emerges as a mature fly. Phorid flies attack only fire ants,
and arent dangerous to other ant species or mammals.
APHIS, which manages programs to use biological control for
invasive species, approached ARS earlier this year about increasing phorid fly
production to facilitate reuniting these two insect adversaries.
APHIS conducted a survey of all 50 states and asked state
agricultural representatives which insects and weed pests might be biologically
controlled. Seven southern states came back with imported fire ant ranked as
top pest priority, said Richard L. Dunkle, deputy administrator of
APHIS Plant Protection and
Quarantine Program. Its a really nice fit, Dunkle said of
APHIS partnering with ARS and DPI to rear the fly.
Over the next few years, state cooperators will closely monitor
the phorid flys adaptability to release site conditions, spread to new
areas and impact on fire ant populations.
Another objective is to establish other biocontrols that will
complement the flies, including a smaller, cooler-climate phorid fly species, a
parasitic ant and Thelohania solenopsae, a fire ant pathogen that causes
disease in U.S. populations of the pest. |
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Scientific contact: Richard J. Brenner,
Imported Fire Ant and Household
Insects Unit, ARS Center for Medical,
Agricultural, & Veterinary Entomology, Gainesville, Fla., phone (352)
374-5903, fax (352) 374-5818,
rbrenner@gainesville.usda.ufl.edu.
APHIS contact: Hallie Pickhardt, APHIS
Legislative and Public Affairs,
Riverdale, Md., phone (301) 734-5175, fax (301) 734-5221,
hallie.pickhardt@usda.gov.
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