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Read the
magazine
story to find out more. |
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 Kudzu, which spreads at the
rate of 150,000 acres annually, could meet its match in a naturally occurring
fungus that ARS scientists have formulated as a biologically based herbicide.
Click the image for more information about it. |
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Fungus Tapped to Take on Kudzu
By Jan Suszkiw
July 16, 2009
Kudzu, "The Vine that Ate the South," could meet its match in a
naturally occurring fungus that Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) scientists have formulated as a biologically based
herbicide.
By one estimate, kudzu spreads at the rate of 150,000 acres annually,
easily outpacing the use of herbicide spraying and mowing, as well increasing
the costs of these controls by $6 million annually.
But in Stoneville, Miss., ARS plant pathologist
Doug
Boyette and colleagues are testing a fungus named Myrothecium
verrucaria, which infects kudzu with an astonishing speed of its own. In
fact, the fungus works so quickly that kudzu plants sprayed with it in the
morning start showing signs of damage by mid-afternoon, according to Boyette,
with the
ARS
Southern Weed Science Research Unit in Stoneville.
He first began working with M. verrucaria in 1998, when a
Louisiana Tech University scientist
furnished him with isolates from diseased sicklepod specimens. In greenhouse
experiments, spray formulations killed 100 percent of kudzu seedlings and 90 to
100 percent of older plants in outdoor trials. Myrothecium also worked
its anti-kudzu magic under a wide range of conditions, including the absence of
dew.
Additionally, host-range tests in 2005 showed that Myrothecium
caused little or no injury to many of the woody plants known to occur in
kudzu-infested habitats, including oak, cedar, pine, hickory, pecan, sassafras
and blackberry.
A few companies expressed interest, but only if the fungus' production
of toxins called trichothecenes could be reduced or stopped. Boyette's group
examined several approaches, settling on a method of growing Myrothecium
in a fermenter on a liquid diet instead of a solid one. Not only did this stop
trichothecene production or reduce it to acceptable levels, the method also
extended the fungus' shelf life and potency under field conditions.
Besides kudzu, Myrothecium also showed potential as a
pre-emergence bioherbicide, controlling purslane and spurge in transplanted
tomatoes.
Read more
about the 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.