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A promising biocontrol agent for garlic mustard,
one of the most problematic invaders of temperate forests in North America, has
been identified. Click the image for more information about it.
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Scientists Identify Weevil as Biocontrol for Garlic
Mustard
By Stephanie
Yao
July 20, 2009 A promising biocontrol agent for garlic
mustard, one of the most problematic invaders of temperate forests in North
America, has been identified by Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) scientists and cooperators.
Garlic mustard, Alliaria petiolata, got its name because its leaves,
when crushed, smell like garlic. According to legend, it was brought here from
Europe in the 1860s as a culinary herb, but unfortunately, it doesnt
taste very good.
Since then, this invasive weed has spread to 34 U.S. states and four
Canadian provinces. It is very difficult to eradicate because its seeds can
remain viable in the soil for more than 10 years. A single plant can produce
hundreds of seeds, which scatter as far as several yards from the parent.
Garlic mustard also releases natural substances called allelochemicals into the
soil to suppress growth of other plants.
Ecologist
Adam
Davis, with the ARS
Invasive
Weed Management Research Unit in Urbana, Ill., collaborated with colleagues
at Michigan State University,
Cornell University, the
University of Illinois and
CABI in Switzerland to create a computer
model to simulate the weeds life cycle.
CABI scientists also found four Ceutorhynchus weevils as potential
biocontrol agents for garlic mustard. Davis combined the feeding information of
the four candidate weevils and the demographic information on garlic mustard in
North America to assess each weevils ability to inflict damage on the
weed and inhibit its growth. C. scrobicollis came out on top.
The tiny C. scrobicollis only eats garlic mustard. It feeds on the
weeds root crown, the area where nutrients are stored. This stops the
flow of nutrients and water from the roots to the rest of the plant. The weevil
also damages the meristem, the area where new growth takes place. As a result,
garlic mustard produces fewer seeds or, in areas with high weevil populations,
dies prematurely without producing any seeds.
C. scrobicollis is currently awaiting release at the
University of Minnesota.
Read
more about this research in the July 2009 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine, available online.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.