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Biological Control |
| University of Florida | Aquatic, Wetland and Invasive Plant Information Retrieval System |
The submersed plant, Eurasian water milfoil
is considered to be the worst aquatic weed in the US, occurring in more
than 30 states. The first biocontrol work for this plant begain in 1967 in Yugoslavia. Because
many of the possible biocontrol insects from its home range already occur in the US, the major
recent research emphasis has been on pathogens to control this plant.
As for insects, a flower-eating weevil, Phytobius leucogaster, was evaluated in the
1970s, but failed to establish field populations (when moved from California to Florida).
However, new biocontrol work with an indigenous American aquatic weevil,
Euhrychiopsis lecontei, shows promise. In experimental tank tests, weevil herbivory
resulted in a 50% decline in water milfoil biomass and up to 100% of the plants were damaged.
Further research confirms that this native weevil is a water milfoil specialist, preferring Eurasian
water milfoil to all other plants. The first instar weevil larvae emerge from eggs laid on the
meristem of water milfoil and feed on meristematic tissue. Later instars feed on the stems and
burrow into them; adults feed on leaves and stems. The efficacy of field releases of this insect
currently is being evaluated.
Other possible biocontrol candidates for Eurasian water milfoil include a naturalized pyralid moth,
Acentria ephemerella, and a native chironomid midge, Cricotopus
myriophylli. The caterpillar of Acentria has been associated with milfoil
declines in New England and Ontario; studies show it has a "high preference" for Eurasian water
milfoil, but it also eats many other species of aquatic macrophytes.
Cricotopus myriophylli, the native midge, has been associated with Eurasian water
mifoil declines in the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia. The highly specific larvae eat the
water milfoil meristem.
More detailed information on these insects is at
this Web site, which is
maintained by Dr Raymond Newman, University of Minnesota Department of Fisheries and
Wildlife (rmn@finsandfur.fw.umn.edu). We
thank he and his associate, Lynn Maher, for the use of these photographs.