Read the
magazine
story to find out more.
|

ARS may add another biocontrol of the Old World
climbing fern by putting to work a new stem borer moth, whose caterpillars can
kill 40 feet or more of this invasive plant, here smothering a cypress tree in
southern Florida. Click the image for more information about it.
|

|
Stem-Destroying Insect May Help Conquer Climbing
Fern
By Marcia Wood
July 6, 2009 Throughout much of Florida's famed
Everglades, an invasive, light-green vine called Old World climbing fern now
cloaks the forest floor. Besides smothering shrubs and even small trees with
its dense, spongy mats, the intrusive fern, known to scientists as Lygodium
microphyllum, also forms soft, twining stems that climb tree trunks.
Underneath this layer of living fern, dry, dead lygodium stems accumulate,
boosting the wildfire hazard.
To help stop the fern's vertical and horizontal advance,
Agricultural Research Service
(ARS)-funded scientists at the Australian Biological Control Laboratory in
Brisbane, and their ARS colleagues in Florida, have found and studied a coterie
of insects that are natural enemies of the fern in its homelandsthe
tropics and subtropics of the Old World, including Australia.
Some of these beneficial insects have already been put to work in Florida.
In the coming years, they may be joined by stem-boring moths, according to
research entomologist Matthew Purcell. He's director of the Brisbane
laboratory, which is operated by ARS and Australia's
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization (CSIRO).
The female stem-boring mothless than a half-inch from wingtip to
wingtiplays eggs that hatch into unusually long, cream-colored larvae.
These slender caterpillars bore into the fern's stems to eat the pith.
For the fern, the invasion is catastrophic. A tunnel-boring larva has the
potential to kill 40 feet or more of the fern, even if the tunnel itself is
only a few feet in length. That's a strong punch for a half-inch-long
caterpillar to deliver.
ARS-funded research overseas pinpointed stem borers' potential to control
the fern in 1999. Subsequent expeditionsby Purcell; CSIRO colleagues Tony
Wright, Jeff Makinson, Bradley Brown and Ryan Zonneveld; former Brisbane
director
John
Goolsby, now with ARS in Weslaco, Texas; and Ted Center, with ARS in Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla.have yielded stem borers from several climbing fern
species in Southeast Asia.
Among the most promising of these new candidates is a stem borer from Hong
Kong. Importantly, the Brisbane scientists have been able to rear it in
captivity, an essential step for completing requisite tests of its biology.
Read
more about this research in the July 2009 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.