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A gang of Galerucella beetles (top) go to work on purple
loosestrife leaves. Bottom photo shows the weed in its flowering stage.
Galerucella image courtesy
Allard
Cossé, ARS.
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Chemical Communiqué of Weed-Attacking
Beetle Deciphered
By
Jan Suszkiw October 19, 2005
Monitoring beetle attacks on purple loosestrife could become easier to
do now that Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) scientists have discovered the beneficial insects' chemical
attractant, or pheromone.
The leaf-eating beetles, Galerucella calmariensis and G.
pusilla, were approved for U.S. release in 1992 as a biologically based
means of controlling purple loosestrife, an exotic weed that degrades wetland
habitats across North America. Chemical, mechanical and manual control methods
can check small infestations. Larger ones, however, are a long-term fight
perhaps best fought by Galerucella and other biocontrol agents.
Monitoring the beetles' population size and spread is critical to
understanding their biocontrol success, notes entomologist
Robert
Bartelt, with ARS'
National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research (NCAUR), Peoria, Ill. Starting
in 2002, his team sought a chemical attractant that could lure the insects to
traps for counting or relocation to new release sites.
Using a technique called electroantennographic detection, team member
Allard
Cossé saw the first hint of a pheromone from male G. calmariensis
beetles. Obtaining enough pheromone for chemical analysis wasn't easy: over
1,000 collections of airborne chemicals from groups of live
beetlesprocessed over 3 years by team member
Bruce
Zilkowskiyielded a mere 17 micrograms of pure pheromone.
Chemical analysis at NCAUR and elsewhere determined the pheromone to
have a novel, dimethylfuran lactone structure. The team synthesized enough
pheromone from commercially available chemicals to confirm its structure and to
conduct initial field tests. In tests this past May, "sticky" traps containing
the synthetic attractant captured 352 beetles, of both species and sexes,
versus 64 for untreated traps, verifying the attractant's effectiveness.
Male Galerucella beetles release the pheromone compound while feeding
on loosestrifetheir only host plantalerting others of food and
mating opportunities. Somehow, the two species avoid competing with each other
despite using the exact same pheromone, according to Bartelt. Next month, he'll
give a poster presentation describing the research during an
Entomological Society of America meeting
in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief in-house scientific research agency.