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|   BIOLOGICAL PEST
  CONTROL   E. F. Legner Professor of Biological
  Control University of California             Biological Pest Control emphasizes the introduction of natural
  enemies from distant areas. Usually this involves going to other geographic
  areas to secure predators, parasitoids and/or pathogens to control the target
  pest. The technique has met with numerous successes starting dramatically
  with the control of the invaded cuttony-cushion scale. In that and other
  dramatic successes the degree of suppression has remained at 99% or more,
  with no need to apply any other control measure. There are numerous cases
  where the success has been less dramatic, and for these it is necessary to
  deploy other control measures, which should be done in harmony with the
  controls that are being given by the natural enemies, albeit not to complete
  satisfaction. Here considerable knowledge is required to do it properly,
  which more often than not is not available. In the latter case we enter the
  realm of Integrated Pest Management. When agricultural scientists working out
  of colleges and universities are in control there is a greater likelihood of
  success.             The
  biological control of pests with imported natural enemies involves the
  addition of new biotic mortality factors to the pest's ecosystem. This
  practice is often carefully scrutinized by regulatory agencies, which strive
  to eliminate the establishment of potentially harmful organisms. Biological
  control researchers continuously seek more effective guidelines for judging a
  natural enemy's capabilities before importation in order to accelerate
  biological control success rates and to reduce project costs (Coulson 1981).
  The manner by which biological control is achieved varies considerably among
  projects and the various countries utilizing the technique; and there is a
  continuing debate on proper procedures for selection of natural enemies and
  regulation of their importation (Legner & Bellows 1999).            The
  primary goal of federal, state or university importation programs is the
  same, i.e., the collection, safe transport, and quarantine processing,
  leading ultimately to the colonization in the field of candidate biological
  control agents. However, there are differences in the methods, which are, or
  can be, used by each entity. Perhaps the main factor in the United States is
  that the U. S. Department of Agriculture (APHIS) either on its own initiative
  or in concurrence with overriding dicta (as from the Environmental Protection
  Agency) issues regulations regarding the importation and quarantine handling
  of biological agents which the USDA (ARS), individual states and universities
  are expected to follow.            Of
  mutual concern to the explorer/collector/shipper and government regulatory
  agencies and quarantine personnel are the identification of target species
  and their hosts, permits to import the material collected, packaging and
  labeling, method of shipment, clearance at the port of entry by customs and
  agricultural inspectors, and the quarantine facility itself.             Most
  of the technical and biological considerations relative to acquiring and
  shipping biological agents remain much the same as those described for
  entomophagous arthropods and /or weed feeders by Bartlett and van den Bosch
  (1964), Boldt and Drea (1980), Coulson and Soper (1989), Klingman and Coulson
  (1983), and for phytophagous (weed feeders) organisms by Schroeder and Goeden
  (1986). In actual operation USDA (ARS) sponsored quarantine laboratories
  receive shipments which usually originate from a USDA laboratory abroad where
  the material has been screened for contaminants before being shipped to a
  primary USDA quarantine facility in the United States, such as the laboratory
  at Newark, Delaware, where further screening for unwanted organisms may occur
  before the biological agent is forwarded to requestors in the field who may
  or may not work out of a secondary quarantine facility where the biological
  agent can be propagated or released directly into the field.            State
  departments of agriculture or universities usually send out members of their
  staff as explorer/collectors, who typically do not have access to laboratory
  facilities while in the field. As a consequence shipments sent to their
  quarantine laboratories may contain more than one targeted pest species and
  more than one natural enemy of each of these. They must then be segregated in
  quarantine and studied through one generation (for newly introduced species)
  before they can be released. Unsolicited extraneous material inadvertently
  included may warrant further study in quarantine. If so, specific
  arrangements must be made with APHIS PPQ regarding the handling of such
  material. USDA collectors when abroad can utilize all available U.S.
  governmental facilities (embassies, agricultural attaches, commissary,
  vehicles, communication facilities, etc.) to expedite their missions. Thus
  far U.S. state and university collectors abroad have only rarely been able to
  avail themselves of similar federal cooperation even though their missions
  were financed by public funds and their efforts would potentially accrue to
  the benefit of agricultural crop production on a regional if not national
  scale in the U.S.            International
  geo-political and socio-economic unrest may impact heavily on the success of
  failure of foreign exploration missions. Terrorism in its broadest sense has
  become a major deterrent to the search for biological agents in many areas of
  the world. Colleagues in such areas or intermediary organizations (i.e.,
  charging a fee for service), such as the Commonwealth Institute For
  Biological Control, Silwood, UK, may be able to supply the desired beneficial
  organisms, but experience has shown that biological control workers who know
  what they need and who physically participate in the collecting process tend
  to make a better showing in terms of successful introductions (Legner &
  Bellows 1999).            A
  highly important consideration is that during the last 25 years the number of
  students trained in biological control and population ecology entomology
  worldwide has been on the increase. The hope is that this expanding pool of
  "applied ecologists" portends improved international cooperation
  regarding greater use of the biological method of pest control. However, it
  is anticipated that further legal constraints on biological control of pests
  are, or will be, imposed by new and/or pending technical regulations
  ostensibly aimed at protecting endangered species or the environment. These
  regulations could severely hamper or preclude importation and field use of
  new candidate natural enemies.            The
  purpose for exploration is to search for, import and colonize natural enemies
  of our pests from areas where the pest is indigenous, or at least present in
  low numbers because its natural enemies keep it in check. The need for
  exploration is to protect our environment from needless or questionable use
  of chemical pesticides, especially those with long half lives and/or broad
  spectrum toxicity which can adversely affect non-target species and
  beneficial organisms and ultimately the food chain within a wide range of
  biologically diverse species.             The
  basic goal is to import species of strains presumed to be pre-adapted to
  areas targeted for colonization of beneficial organisms. One tries for large
  founder numbers in order to keep the gene pool as large as possible. Although
  traditionally used for homopterous pests of perennial crops (DeBach 1964), it
  is increasingly considered for non-homopterous and annual pests in
  agricultural, urban and glasshouse environments. Extra agricultural uses in
  medical, forest and household entomology are expanding.            Environmental
  concerns and laws, public opinion and resistance of arthropod and weed pests
  to chemical pesticides are increasingly forcing a consideration and
  implementation of non-chemical solutions of pest problems. Classical
  biological control is a powerful and proven tool. The increasing threat that
  federally mandated regulations may neutralize the importation and
  colonization of new natural enemies by greatly slowing the process far beyond
  sound biological protocols which have served applied biological control and
  society for well over 100 years.    Conclusions            Natural
  enemies for use in biological control may be categorized into separate risk
  groups. Parasitic and predaceous arthropods fit into the lowest risk
  category, but are the most difficult to study and to assess for potential
  success. The policy of certain countries, e.g., Australia, of requiring
  intensive studies on native organisms before allowing them to be exported is
  especially devastating to the deployment of biological control. A recent case
  of invading Australian wood borers that attack eucalyptus in America has
  already caused the death of over half of the trees in California, while the
  importation of effective natural enemies continues to move at a crawl. Yet
  progress is being made with increased attention to basic ecological and
  behavioral research. The rate of biological control successes may drop
  initially as the style of "educated empiricism" (Coppell &
  Mertins 1977) becomes more widely adopted, as has apparently already begun (Hall
  & Ehler 1979, Hall et al. 1980). Success rates could be expected to
  increase as the database enlarges and intercommunication possibilities
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