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USDA plans to
loose biological agents against invasive
thistles
Mite and weevil come to the rescue of
crops, livestock
Mateusz Perkowski
Capital Press
March 26, 2009
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Thistle is the common
name of a group of flowering plants
characterized by leaves with sharp
prickles on the margins, mostly in
the family Asteraceae. |
Scientists at the USDA want
to deploy highly target-specific weapons
against two common Western weeds.
The agency's Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service may unleash biological
control agents against the Russian thistle
and yellow starthistle, invasive species
that afflict crop and livestock production
throughout the West.
The potential effects of these biological
control efforts have been compiled by APHIS
in an environmental assessment and recently
released to the public.
A species of blister mite that originates in
Turkey, Uzbekistan and Greece - Aceria
salsolae - has been identified as a natural
foe of the Russian thistle, which is native
to southwest Asia.
Since being introduced to South Dakota in
the 1870s, Russian thistle - the tumbleweed
- has spread throughout the Western U.S.,
where it grows in disturbed soils and arid
regions.
"The infestation of Russian thistle causes
millions of dollars of damage by disrupting
automobile traffic, clogging irrigation
canals, piling up against fences and houses,
and igniting and spreading wildfires,"
according to APHIS.
The plant is an iconic image of the old
West, particularly when it detaches from the
soil and tumbles across the landscape. That
tumbling is how the plant disperses vast
numbers of seeds over large areas, according
to University of California's integrated
pest management guidelines.
Aside from directly competing with crops for
moisture and nutrients, the species provides
habitat for insect pests and plant
pathogens, according to the IPM guidelines.
Herbicides, grazing and tillage, among other
efforts, haven't been able to effectively
suppress the weed, which is why APHIS is
looking for biological alternatives,
according to the agency.
The blister mite under consideration by
APHIS hides in crevices within the Russian
thistle and feeds on the plant's cell
contents, resulting in the death of its
growing shoots.
The mite stunts the thistle's development
and hinders its ability to reproduce, but
APHIS research has shown that it doesn't
negatively affect non-target plant species.
The weevil - Ceratapion basicorne - that
APHIS has identified as a natural enemy of
the yellow starthistle does minimal damage
to related non-target species, but many of
them are invasive themselves.
Weevil larvae hatch on thistle leaves and
burrow down the plant's stalk and into the
root crown, hindering growth and seed
production.
Yellow starthistle was brought to California
in the mid-1800s from Chile, where it was
initially introduced by Spaniards in the
17th century, according to the University of
California's Weed Research and Information
Center.
Since then, the weed has spread throughout
most of the U.S., but the greatest
concentration is in California, Oregon,
Washington and Idaho, according to APHIS.
As with the Russian thistle, conventional
weed control methods haven't been
sufficient.
The weed "displaces desirable plants in both
natural and grazing areas," APHIS said.
Cattle and other grazing livestock usually
avoid the plant's prickly spines, degrading
the quality of rangeland. If horses do eat
yellow starthistle, toxins in the weed can
cause ulcers, brain lesions and death.
"In addition to rangeland, pastures and
grasslands, yellow starthistle is the most
important roadside weed problem in much of
Central and Northern California and has, on
occasion, caused problems in dryland
cereals, orchards, vineyards, cultivated
crops and wastelands," according to WRIC.
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section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without
profit or payment to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving
this information for non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For
more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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