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 Silverleaf whiteflies,
Bemisia argentifolii, on a leaf. Click the image for more
information about it.
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Possible New Control for Whiteflies Discovered
By Alfredo
Flores May 11, 2007
An unusually durable fungus that was first spotted on tiny
insects feeding on eggplants in Texas may become a new biological control for
the widespread and costly agricultural pests known as whiteflies.
The fungus was first isolated by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) entomologist
Enrique
Cabanillas, working with entomologist
Walker
Jones at the ARS
Beneficial
Insects Research Unit, Weslaco, Texas.
The silverleaf whitefly, Bemisia argentifolii (previously known
as B. tabaci biotype B), may be small in stature, but it can be deadly
as a pestsucking and feeding on the juices of a myriad of host plants.
Heavy feeding can give plants under attack a yellow, mottled look and
eventually kill them. Whiteflies cause major crop losses, both directly by
feeding and indirectly by transmitting plant viruses.
Pesticides have been ineffective for controlling whiteflies because of
a built-in natural resistance, the need for repeated applications and the
potential hazard some insecticides may pose to the environment, animal life or
humans.
Isolated by Cabanillas in 2001, the new fungal species has been named
Isaria propawskii. In the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas, it has been
shown to kill both larval and adult stages of silverleaf whitefly. In fact,
since 2001, it has periodically wiped out whiteflies at the ARS insect-rearing
facilities in Weslaco.
Notable aspects of I. propawskii include its natural
establishment in a semiarid region where temperatures can reach 107 degrees
Fahrenheitand its continuing persistence, even in the absence of insect
hosts. A high spore production in common culture media makes this fungus
comparatively easy to grow in vitro, in the laboratory.
These features, plus its high pathogenic potential against a second
major insect pestthe glassy-winged sharpshooter, Homalodisca
vitripennis (previously known as H. coagulata)make the I.
propawskii fungus a promising candidate for practical biological control of
two major U.S. farm pests.
Read more
about this research in the May/June 2007 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.