Natural Pathogen Under Study
To Starve Fire Ant Colonies
DURANT, Okla. (AP) The fire ants in a
pasture near Durant may find themselves on sudden diets
if a microorganism released by scientists works as
expected.
U.S. Agriculture Department researchers unleashed the
pathogen, T. solenopsae, last week near Durant and Hope,
Ark., to test what they believe is a natural new weapon
for controlling the invasive insect.
"What happens has been on the queen herself. It's
like she's on a crash diet that starts impacting her
ability to lay eggs," said David Williams, an
entomologist with the Agricultural Research Service in
Gainesville, Fla. "Instead of laying 900 eggs a day,
pretty soon she's only laying 30 eggs."
The red imported fire ant infests millions of acres in
11 southern states. It has been spreading since its
arrival from South America in the 1930s.
The ants can attack and sting repeatedly, sometimes
resulting in death for people with allergies. Their big
lumpy hills can wreck lawns and damage farm equipment.
In laboratory studies, Williams found that the
populations of fire ant colonies infected with T.
solenopsae were significantly reduced after three months.
Scientists first found the pathogen occurring
naturally in Brazil fire ant colonies in 1973. Two years
ago they discovered it in colonies in Mississippi,
Florida and Texas.
The microorganism appears to be specific to fire ants
and does not harm plants or native ant species, Williams
said.
"We see that this pathogen really works," he
said.
A sure sign of the disease is when the queen begins to
lose weight. She grows weak and lays fewer and fewer
eggs, all of which are infected with the pathogen and
further weaken the colony.
"The beauty of this thing we have is once you
inoculate five or 10 colonies, the disease spreads on its
own," Williams said.
The disease works slowly with colony elimination
taking nine to 18 months.
In the field tests, scientists are trying to infect
the colonies by releasing infected immature ants.
Williams said it will be eight to 10 weeks before they
know if they were successful.
Researchers believe the microorganism will prove much
more cost effective than current eradication methods that
also can harm native ants. They are working on
mass-producing the pathogen.
"There are many large areas where baits are too
expensive," Williams said. "They also have an
environmental impact."
Scientists also plan to test the pathogen in Alabama,
Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina,
Virginia, Mississippi and Louisiana. The study is
expected to take one to two years.
|