FILE:  <ch-29.htm>                                                                                                                                                                                     GENERAL INDEX                        [Navigate to   MAIN MENU ]
 
| COCONUT MOTH     Levuana irridescens
  Bethune-Baker  --  Lepidoptera, Zygaenidae   (Contacts)     ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge &
  search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases     
         
  Coconuts were the chief income of the native Fijians and enabled
  islands to be inhabited and prosper that otherwise would be uninhabited.  Historically the coconut moth was
  restricted to the large island of Viti Levu where it was considered native.  Because of the damage, coconuts were never
  considered a commercial crop there. 
  The threat developed as the moth spread to other islands causing
  defoliation and crop failure.  The
  coconuts on islands attacked by L.
  irridescens turned from the
  normal fringe of shining green fronds to a band of lifeless grey.  At the close of an outbreak not a single
  green palm was to be found.           
  Because the coconut moth was originally known only from Viti Levu and
  there it had no parasitoids of consequence, it was suspected that it might be
  exotic.  However, careful searches
  throughout the south Pacific islands and southeast Asia, coconut moth was
  never found outside of Fiji.  However,
  a related moth, Artona
  catoxantha, had been
  known for some time to occur in Java and Malaya and to be heavily
  parasitized.  In 1924 attempts were
  made through cooperating entomologists to obtain parasitoids from A. catoxantha. 
  Several species were collected in abundance in Java and twice sent by
  ships' cold storage to Fiji, but as the voyage was prolonged by routes
  through Australia (4,000 miles), and took one month, the parasitoids failed
  to survive.         
  At the time biological control was still in its infancy and no single
  approach was considered.  It was, for
  example, decided to import a series of generalist parasitoids of non related
  hosts from Hawaii in the hope that they might attack coconut moth.  There were attempts to increase predation
  with an ant, Oecophylla
  smaragdina, which was
  used in the Orient to control pests on citrus.  Even insectivorous birds were considered for importation from
  Sri Lanka and India, etc.  These
  approaches either failed or were finally rejected as impractical, undesirable
  or unfeasible.  The parasitoids of A. catoxantha were again considered for introduction, even
  though success was thought to be improbable due to the necessity of
  transferring from Artona to Levuana.  Often host specificity prevents such
  transfers; but, as was learned from studies of moths in Canadian forests, in
  certain cases the same parasitoids could attack distinctly different host
  species.         
  Drs. Taylor, Tothill and Paine conducted additional explorations in
  Melanesia and Indonesia in 1925, and nine species related to Levuana were found, most of them
  being quire rare and heavily parasitized. 
  When Taylor returned to Fiji with a shipment of parasitoids, all had
  died.  Because of the rarity of most
  species, and the fact that Artona
  catoxantha was more readily
  available in Java and other parts of Indonesia and was known to have at least
  two active parasitoids, Ptychomyia and Apanteles,
  it was decided to concentrate on their importation.  While H. W. Simmonds was in Kuala Lumpur early in 1925 to seek
  out a Artona outbreak,
  Taylor was travelling in Malaysia when he located a small outbreak of Artona about 300 miles from
  Singapore at Batu Gajah.  Both species
  of parasitoids were present.  Simmonds
  joined him there to prepare as large a shipment as possible for Fiji, which was
  gathered into 17 large Wardian-type ventilated cages, each of which would
  hold 4-5 small coconut seedlings infested with both parasitized and
  unparasitized Artona
  larvae.  The latter were to serve as
  hosts for egg-laying parasitoids that emerged en route.  About 20,000 larvae were placed on the 85
  young palms and sent 300 miles to Singapore by rail.         
  There were great difficulties encountered in getting shipments through
  alive.  It had been decided that
  direct shipment from Singapore to Fiji was required in order to avoid
  Australian quarantines.  However,
  there were virtually no direct sailings so that most shipments went by
  Australia anyway.  Also the
  collections and shipments had to be made when the insects were available, but
  this had to coincide with the avai8lability of a ship which often was months
  apart.  About the only hope was the
  Clan Line of cargo boats which sailed between London and Fiji, sometimes via
  Singapore.  In June it was learned by
  cable that the Clan Mackay would sail from
  Singapore on July 10 for Fiji but not directly.  Meanwhile it was learned, again by cable, that Clan Matheson was sailing from Java directly to Suva, Fiji, on
  July 10, so for an extra 250 pounds sterling the Clan Mackay
  was instructed to call at Surabaya, Java, to transfer the parasitoids to the Clan Matheson which would be ready to sail (DeBach 1974).  This saved several days although it still
  took 25 days following collection to reach Suva.  Taylor accompanied this shipment to supervise and care for it
  en route, arriving in Suva on Aug 3, 1925, when he immediately conveyed the
  cages to a quarantine insectary. 
  About 315 live adult parasitic flies of Ptychomyia but no Apanteles
  survived.  The tachinid flies were
  transferred to cages stocked with Levuana
  larvae and immediately attacked them. 
  By August 21 the first generation of new adult flies began to emerge
  and insectary culture was assured. 
  Within six months over 15,000 flies had been bred and colonized over
  the coconut moth infested area.  The
  potential of the fly was first realized when just two months after the
  importation, parasitoids were found to be accidentally established around the
  insectary.  From this time in October
  onward, the dispersal of the fly was very rapid and it was found to be established
  throughout all host infested zones within six months of the first liberation.         
  Within three months of liberation of the Suva colony, Levuana was exterminated on the
  original release trees.  Six months
  after the initial introduction of Ptychomyia,
  many of the outbreaks had subsided completely.  When the final report was written in 1929, there had been no
  new outbreak of Levuana for three years. 
  DeBach (1974) noted that it seemed especially significant that this
  single natural enemy, P. remota, apparently gave better
  control of its adopted host L.
  irridescens than it did of
  its native host Artona
  (Tothill et al. 1930) (also see Gater 1925, 1926a,b, 1928; Simmonds 1930, van
  der Vecht 1950, O'Connor 1953, and Clausen 1978).     REFERENCES:          [Additional references may be found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]   Clausen, C.
  P.  1978.  Zygaenidae.  In:  C. P. Clausen (ed.), Introduced Parasites
  and Predators of Arthropod Pests and Weeds. 
  U. S. Dept. Agric., Agric. Handbk. No. 480. 
  545 p.   DeBach,
  P.  1974.  Biological Control
  by Natural Enemies.  Cambridge
  University Press, London, New York. 
  323 p.   Gater, B. A. R.  1925.  Some observations
  on the Malaysian coconut zygaenid (Artona
  catoxantha Hamps.).  Malayan Agric. J. 13:  92-115.   Gater, B. A. R.  1926a.  Further
  observations aon the Malaysian coconut zygaenid (Artona catoxantha
  Hamps.) and its parasites.  Malayan
  Agric. J. 14:  304-50.   Gater, B. A. R.  1926b.  Further
  observations on the Malaysian coconut zygaenid (Artona catoxantha
  Hamps.) and its parasites.  Malayan
  Agric. J. 14:  304-50.   Gater, B. A. R.  1928.  The Malayan
  coconut zygaenid (Artona catoxantha Hamps.) and its
  relation to Levuana iridfescens B. baker, in
  Fiji.  3d Pan-Pacific Sci. Cong. Proc.
  2:  2082-85.   O'Connor, B. A.  1953.  Biological
  control of insects and plants in Fiji. 
  7th Pacific Sci. Cong. Proc. (1949) 4:  278-93.   Simmonds, H. W.  1930.  Problems in
  biological control.  The gap in the
  sequence of generations in Artona
  catoxantha, the coconut leaf
  moth of Malaya.  Trop Agric.
  (Trinidad) 7:  215-19.   Tothill, J. D., T. H. C. Taylor & R. W.
  Paine.  1930.  The coconut moth in Fiji.  A history of its control by means of
  parasites.  Publ. Imp. Bur. Ent.,
  London.  296 p.   van der Vecht,
  J.  1950.  The coconut leaf
  moth (Artona catoxantha Hamps.). Pt. I.  Life history and habits of Artona catoxantha, its parasites and hyperparasites.  Min. Agric. Gen. Agric. Res. Sta.,
  Bogor, Contrib. 110:  1-77.   |