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Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
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Subjects of Investigation
Ludwigia hexapetala
Centaurea solstitialis
Tamarix spp.
 

Research Project: BIOLOGICAL CONTROL OF INVASIVE TERRESTRIAL AND RIPARIAN WEEDS IN THE FAR WESTERN U.S. REGION, WITH EMPHASIS ON THISTLES, BROOMS AND CAPE-IVY

Location: Exotic and Invasive Weeds Research

Title: Field garden experiments to assess the host specificity of Aceria solstitialis (Acari: Eriophyoidea), potential biocontrol agent for Centaurea solstitialis (Asteraceae)

Authors
item Stoeva, Atanaska -
item Harizanova, Vili -
item Cristofaro, Massimo -
item DE Lillo, Enrico -
item Lecce, Francesca -
item Paolini, Allessandra -
item Di Cristina, Franca -
item Smith, Lincoln

Submitted to: International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: September 11, 2011
Publication Date: N/A

Technical Abstract: Centaurea solstitialis (yellow starthistle) is an annual noxious weed that currently infests millions of acres of rangelands, non-cultivated and natural areas in the Western USA. It displaces native plant communities reducing plant diversity and forage production for livestock and wildlife. Aceria solstitialis is an eriophyoid mite found exclusively in association with C. solstitialis in Turkey and Bulgaria. This mite damages bolting plants causing stunting, leaf curling and incomplete flower development. During 2008 and 2009, two open field tests were conducted in Bulgaria, to study the mite's dispersal behavior and host range. The experiments were conducted on plots of 100 m2 at the experimental field of Agricultural University of Plovdiv. Five plant species were included in the experiment: C. solstitialis (infested and not-infested), C. diffusa, C. cyanus, Carthamus tinctorius and Cynara scolymus. The plants were infested with mites before transplanting them in the field. An infested leaf cutting, with at least 30 mites, was placed on each test plant except on the negative control (C. solstitialis not-infested). Results of these field experiments showed that A. solstitialis mites were present in high population densities only on intentionally infested C. solstitialis and C. cyanus.

   

 
Project Team
Smith, Lincoln - Link
Moran, Patrick
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Crop Protection & Quarantine (304)
 
Related Projects
   FOREIGN EXPLORATION AND EVALUATION OF BIOLOGICAL CONTROL AGENTS FOR THISTLES AND TUMBLEWEED
   PROSPECTIVE INSECT BIOLOGICAL CONTROL AGENTS OF YELLOW STARTHISTLE AND SCOTCH THISTLE IN TURKEY
 
 
Last Modified: 05/25/2013
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