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 To find out which
scent attracts the beetle the most, scientists hooked up an electrode to a
beetle antenna on a severed beetle head. Then they measured electrical
stimulation triggered in the antenna by various scents collected from other
D. elongata beetles. Click the image for more information about
it. |
Synthetic Pheromone Helps Scientists Sniff Out
Biocontrol Bug's Whereabouts
By
Jan Suszkiw April
8, 2005
Monitoring Chinese leafbeetle attacks on saltcedar trees could become
easier now that Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists have synthesized the
beneficial insect's chemical sex attractant, or pheromone.
Saltcedar, the beetle's favorite food, is an invasive species from
Eurasia that is established in more than 20 U.S. states, causing about $100
million annually in damages. The beetle, a natural enemy from China, has been
cleared for release in several western states to biologically control the
invasive tree. Current methods include herbicide spraying, burning and
bulldozing, but none are considered long-term solutions to the problem,
according to
Robert
Bartelt and
Allard
Cossé, entomologists with ARS'
National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research at Peoria, Ill.
They synthesized the beetle's pheromone so that biological control
practitioners, landowners, wildlife biologists and others could more easily
determine how far the insects have moved from release sites, how quickly, and
in what directions. Currently, beetle monitoring requires a sharp eye,
dexterity with a sweep net, and a keen sense of direction while trekking
through 12-foot-high thickets of saltcedar, notes Bartelt, at the ARS center's
Crop
Bioprotection Research Unit.
In studies there, the scientists and group colleague
Richard
Petroski synthesized the beetle's pheromone using affordable, off-the-shelf
chemicals. Field tests in 2004 at a Lovelock, Nev., site showed the synthetic
pheromone is attractive to both male and female beetles. In addition, 2004
field tests showed that odors from saltcedar foliage were very attractive to
the beetles as well. Field tests in 2005 are planned to evaluate whether the
pheromone and saltcedar odors work better when combined than when either is
used alone.
Bartelt and Cossé's research is part of an ARS-led effort
called the "Saltcedar Biological
Control Consortium."
Read more
about the research in the April 2005 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.