View Reports, News and Statistics Related to Your Home State

ARS Scientists Devising New Ways to Protect Avocados

Subscribe to our Agriculture Environment News RSS Feed
Category: Agriculture
Type: News
Source: USDA Agriculture Research Service
Date: Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

U.S.D.A. (USDA) scientists are coming up with new strategies to combat a beetle threatening the nation's avocado trees.

Laurel wilt disease is caused by the fungus Raffaelea lauricola, and is vectored by the redbay ambrosia beetle, an invasive pest from Asia that has spread to the Carolinas, Florida and west to Mississippi. The disease kills 90-95 percent of infected trees. Scientists are concerned that it will soon reach Mexico and California, which are major avocado production areas. Its victims also include several other types of laurel trees.

Paul Kendra and his colleagues at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Subtropical Horticulture Research Station (SHRS) in Miami, Fla., are working to minimize the threat. They are searching for chemical attractants for beetle traps, treating trees in the ARS avocado collection with fungicides to slow the spread of the disease, and shipping trees from the Miami avocado germplasm collection to disease-free sites.

ARS is USDA's principal intramural scientific research agency, and this research supports the U.S.D.A. priority of promoting international food security.

Previous research has shown that like other bark beetles, the redbay ambrosia beetle essentially "sniffs out" volatile compounds. In field experiments, the researchers compared the number of redbay ambrosia beetles attracted to manuka oil lures, phoebe oil lures, and bolts of wood cut from lychee and from the 3 races of avocado trees. The trials were conducted at a Florida conservation area where the beetle has infested trees since 2007.

In lab tests, the researchers also conducted "choice" experiments by placing lychee and avocado wood on opposite ends of a plastic bin and placing the beetles in the middle to see which wood they preferred. Compounds released by the 2 types of wood were analyzed using gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS).

Results published in the Journal of Chemical Ecology showed that the beetles had no strong preference among the 3 avocado races, and that lychee was the most attractive wood. Of the 29 compounds detected, 3 were found to attract the beetle and the lychee had large amounts of all three.

Subsequent research, with results published in the Journal of Economic Entomology, also showed that the phoebe oil lures were effective for ten to twelve weeks, but the manuka lures lasted only about two to three weeks. Knowing how long the manuka lures work should prove useful to Florida agriculture officials, who use them in monitoring efforts. Officials and growers will also benefit from the researchers' discovery that the beetles prefer freshly cut wood surfaces, a finding that helps growers realize trees are vulnerable to attack during pruning.

Read more about this research in the October 2012 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

  User Comments  
There are currently no comments for this story. Be the first to add a comment!
Click here to add a comment about this story.
  Green Tips  
Tune up your lawn mower once a year. This simple-to-do task takes 30 minutes or less and cuts your mower's emissions by up to 50 percent and fuel consumption up to 30 percent.
  Featured Report  
CO2 Emissions by Year
View the trend of total carbon dioxide emissions by year

View Report >>

  Green Building  
Sustainable Building Advisor Program- The Next Great Step
Beyond LEED - check out The Sustainable Building Advisor Program....Read Complete Article >>

All Green Building Articles