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| SPINY BLACKFLY   Aleurocanthus spiniferus (Quaintance) --
  Aleurodidae   (Contacts)     ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge &
  search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases          One of the best examples of a
  biological control success, this project was casually arranged on a
  cooperative basis and apparently did not sustain any cost (DeBach 1974).  Drs. I. Kuwana and T. Ishii discovered
  this blackfly near Nagasaki in Japan around 1922, although it most likely had
  been present earlier and was spreading for some time.  Within a few years it became one of the
  serious pests of citrus trees in the southern island of Kyushu.  Fumigation and insecticide treatments
  failed to control the pest.            There were no
  effective natural enemies in Japan and it was believed that the pest
  originated in south China, which is in the native range of citrus and where
  the spiny blackfly was known to occur. 
  Entomologists and horticulturalists were planning to search for
  natural enemies in China when Dr. F. Silvestri of Portici, Italy, who was on
  a temporary foreign exploration for the University of California to find
  parasitoids of the California red scale, visited Japan.  At that time the Japanese requested that
  he try to find the spiny blackfly upon his return to the Asiatic mainland.          Silvestri
  discovered a parasitoid, Prospaltella
  smithi Silvestri and a
  ladybird beetle, Cryptognatha
  sp., both of which he brought with him on his second visit to Nagasaki on May
  23, 1925.  These were colonized on
  heavily infested trees in the village of Ikiriki, near Nagasaki.  There were only 20 parasitoids and 10
  beetles involved.  The beetles did not
  establish, but the parasitoids reproduced so that by November, adult
  parasitoids were easily found on the leaves of the original release tree.  However, because Nagasaki has a colder
  winter than Canton, China, it was feared that the parasitoids might not
  overwinter successfully.  However, by
  June 1926 parasitoid activity was observed on the release tree, and 74% of
  the whitefly pupae showed exit holes from which adult parasitoids had
  emerged.  They spread rapidly and were
  aided by distribution of leaves bearing parasitized pupae, so that within a
  short time the pest was almost completely eliminated (Kuwana 1934).  DeBach (1974) maintained that the control
  remained perfect to the 1970's.          Please also see Sawada
  et al. (1932), Peterson (1955), Watanabe (1958) and Smith et al. (1964) for
  additional details on biological control efforts and the biologies of host
  and natural enemies.  Also <ch-81.htm>     REFERENCES:          [Additional references may be found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]     DeBach, P.  1974.  Biological Control by Natural
  Enemies.  Cambridge University Press,
  London & New York.  323 p.   Kuwana, I. 
  1934.  Notes on a newly imported parasite of the
  spiny whitefly attacking citrus in Japan. 
  Proc. 5th (1933) Pacific Science Congress 5:  3521-3.   Peterson, G. D., Jr. 
  1955.  Biological control of
  the orange spiny whitefly in Guam.  J. Econ.
  Ent. 48:  681-83.   Sawada, E., N. Ikeda & K.
  Tanaka.  1932. 
  Studies on Prospaltella
  smithi Silv., and enemy of Aleurocanthus spiniferus Quaint.  Japan Dept. Agric. & Forestry Bur.
  Agric. Materials for Agric. Impr. 42: 
  1-28 [in Japanese; Abs. in REv. Appl. Ent. (A), 20:  495.]   Smith, H. D., H. L. Maltby & J. E. Jimenez.  1964. 
  Biological control of the citrus blackfly in Mexico.  U. S. Dept. Agric. Tech. Bull. 1311.  30 p. [may mention whitefly].   Watanabe, C.  1958.  Review of biological control of insect
  pests in Japan.  Proc. 10th Intern.
  Congress Ent., Monteral 4:  515-17.   |