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Biocontrol Beetles Set Free to Tackle
Saltcedar By Kathryn Barry Stelljes
May 22, 2001
Chinese leaf beetles (Diorhabda elongata) are beginning
official duty as the first biological control agents released into the
environment against saltcedar (Tamarix spp.).
These invasive trees, which can grow up to 30 feet tall, infest
more than 1 million acres along western waterways. In addition to crowding out
native plants, saltcedar can increase soil salinity, divert natural streamflow
and increase wildfire frequency. |
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July 1999 story

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Unprecedented monitoring of the beetle and its impacts began in
July 1999, when the insects were put out in large cages at 10 locations in six
western states.
Scientists first released the beetles from field cages last week
near Seymour, Texas, and Pueblo, Colo. They plan to make other releases near
Bishop, Calif.; Fallon, Lovelock and Schurz, Nev.; Delta, Utah; and Lovell,
Wyo. Additional nursery cages are being established at new sites near Woodland
and King City, Calif.
Biological control agents are often released directly into the
environment. In this case, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture and cooperating scientists are watching these beetles
closely to ensure their establishment and to evaluate their impact, population
growth and safety.
This information has been used to ensure that the biocontrol
project protects all native species in the area, including the southwestern
willow flycatcher, Empidonax traillii extimus. In some locations, these
endangered birds nest in saltcedar that has crowded out their native willow
nesting sites.
Biological control is expected to slowly reduce saltcedar,
allowing beneficial plant and animal species to reestablish in severely
infested areas. Other planned activities include continued monitoring of the
insects, plants and associated wildlife, and studies to facilitate revegetation
with native plants.
The project, initiated and coordinated through USDAs
Agricultural Research Service, operates
in conjunction with a consortium of more than 30 federal, state, and local
agencies; universities; and private organizations. The team received a $3
million grant in 2000 from the USDA's Initiative for Future Agriculture and Food
Systems for work on a complex of invasive weeds, including saltcedar.
ARS is USDAs chief scientific research agency.
Scientific contacts: C. Jack DeLoach, ARS
Grassland, Soil and Water Research
Laboratory, Temple, Texas, phone (254) 770-6531, fax (254) 770-6561,
deloach@brc.tamus.edu; Raymond I.
Carruthers, Exotic
and Invasive Weeds Research Unit, ARS Western Regional Research Center, Albany,
Calif., phone (510) 559-6127, fax (510) 559-6123,
ric@pw.usda.gov. |