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| SALVINIA   Salvinia molesta D. S. Mitchell
     & S.
  auriculata Aubl. -- Salviniaceae (Contacts)         ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge & search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases         Salvinia molesta is a free floating aquatic
  fern native to Brazil, which was spread as an aquarium plant and botanical
  curiosity to tropical and subtropical parts of Africa, Asia, Australia, Fiji
  and New Guinea.  It has propagated
  vegetatively and now ranks as one of the world's most important aquatic
  noxious plants (Thomas & Room 1986, Goeden & Andrés 1999).            Salvinia spread to
  Lake Kariba on the Zambia/Zimbabwe border in 1955 and quickly spread to cover
  1,000 km2 or 21% of the lake's surface.  Commonwealth entomologists conducted foreign exploration in
  South American for Salvinia auricularia Aublet, often
  called Kariba weed.  Three insect
  species, the moth Samea multiplicatus Guenee
  (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), the grasshopper, Paulinia acuminata
  (DeGeer) (Orthoptera: Acrididae), and the weevil Cyrtobagous singularis
  Hustache (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), were considered the best candidates for
  biological control.  During 1960-1970
  all three species of insects were released on Lake Kariba and elsewhere in
  Africa and Fiji.  Only P. acuminata became established on Lake Kariba and provided
  limited control of the fern.          Goeden & Andrés
  (1999) relate how by 1970 Kariba weed was cited as one of the best documented
  contemporary examples of the importance of taxonomy to biological control of
  plants.  However a pressed specimen of
  Kariba weed collected in 1941 and preserved in the Rio de Janeiro Botanic
  Garden was not Salvinia auricularia but rather a new
  species described as S. molesta in 1972.  By 1978 the weed was determined to be a
  sterile hybrid that originated in southeastern Brazil.  Exploration by Commonwealth entomologists
  resulted in the detection, study and recommendation of Samea multiplicatus,
  P. acuminata, and what then was thought to be a separate
  biotype of C. singularis, as the most
  promising candidate biological control agents.  Introductions of the weevil were made to Australia in 1980
  where it established readily and in less than two years destroyed a 200 ha
  infestation on Lake Moondarra in northern Australia.  Further studies resulted in the weevil's
  description as Cyrtobagous salviniae Calder &
  Sands.  Results of this project
  support the concept that the best natural enemies are obtained from the
  target plant species (Goeden & Kok 1986, Moran et al. 1986), a concept
  that is frequently challenged (Hokkanen & Pimentel 1984).          Crytobagous salviniae was
  transferred to Papua, New Guinea from Australia in 1982 and established only
  after the novel manipulation of the weevil's environment in field release
  cages (Goeden & Andrés 1999).  This
  involved regular applications of urea to the caged weed which increased its
  nitrogen content and enhanced its nutritional suitability for the weevils
  which then increased their reproduction rate.  The weevils continued to multiply in great numbers once the
  cages were opened and the weevils were allowed access to large volumes of
  unfertilized weeds that covered Sepik Lake to a depth of ca. 1 m. Following a
  large scale redistribution effort in August 1985, salvinia has been reduced
  from 25 km2 of water surface on the lower floodplain of the Sepik
  River to only 2 km2, representing the destruction of two million
  metric tons of salvinia in two years (Goeden & Andrés 1999).          Salvinia auriculata Aubl. in
  Africa has been targeted for biological control using a grasshopper, Paulinia acuminata DeGeer, a weevil, Cyrtobagous singularis
  Hulst., and a moth, Samea multiplicallis Guenée (Bennett
  1966).     REFERENCES:          [Additional references may be found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]     Bennett, F. D.  1966.  Investigations on the insects attacking
  aquatic ferns, Salvinia spp.
  in Trinidad and northern South America. 
  Proc. S. Weed Conf. 19: 
  497-504.   Goeden, R. D. & L. A. Andrés.  1999.  Biological control
  of weeds in terrestrial and aquatic environments.  IN:  Bellows, T. S.
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Goeden, R. D. & L. T. Kok.  1986.  Comments on a
  proposed "new" approach for selecting agents for the biological
  control of weeds.  Canad. Ent.
  118:  51-58.   Hokkanen, H. & D. Pimentel. 
  1984.  New approach for
  selecting biological control agents.  Canad. Ent.
  116:  1109-21.   Moran, V. C., S. Neser & J. H.
  Hoffmann.  1986. 
  The potential of insect herbivores for the biological control of
  invasive plants in South Africa, p. 261-68. 
  In:  I. A. W. MacDonald, F. J. Kruger & A.
  A. Ferrar (eds.), The Ecology and Management of Biological Invasions in
  Southern Africa.  Oxford Univ. Press,
  Capetown. South Africa.   Thomas, P. A. & P. M. Room. 
  1986.  Taxonomy and control of Salvinia molesta.  Nature
  320:  581-84.   |