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Gypsy Moth in B.C. A Case Study in Urban Entomology Tim Ebata, MSc, RPF Forest Practices Branch, BCMOF
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Biology Egg masses laid in late summer; hairs from female protect Hatching of eggs usually in early May 1st instars disperse by ballooning Caterpillars go through 5 to 6 instars Pupate in mid-summer Adults emerge in late summer, females have wings but are flightless
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Biology
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Biology
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History in North America Originally from Europe (also Asian) Imported to Medford, Mass. By Leopold Trouvelot in 1869 wanted to “cross” native moths to produce a silk worm industry Cages blew over, the rest was history First outbreak recorded in 1890 attempts to eradicate failed By 1994, spread throughout E. NA but not in the West. spread throughout E. NA spread throughout E. NA
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History in B.C. 1911- First reported on plants imported from Europe (destroyed on dock) 1978 - Kitsilano infestation - canoe from Quebec, eradicated with Carbaryl Since then >120 different locations where GM have been found, some required eradication, most died out on own Complete history on Gypsy Moth web site Gypsy Moth web siteGypsy Moth web site
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Damage Feeds on over 300 different shrub and tree species Each caterpillar can eat up to 100 cm 2 of foliage (two leaves per day for a late instar larva) Outbreaks in hardwood forests in the east are very dramatic
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Damage
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Damage Human Health Masses of larvae covering everything Hairs are “urticating” - allergies
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Damage cont’d In BC, threat is not to commercial forest even though conifers can be consumed Poses a possible trade restriction tool - inspections, certification, quarantines Goods that can transport egg masses - nursery stock, logs with bark, Xmas trees Vehicles, OHAs
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Damage cont’d US market is the largest export market for B.C. California is extremely concerned with the GM threat Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Calif., etc. all conduct similar detection and eradication programs as B.C.
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Damage cont’d Ecological impacts serious competitor to native leps in east, change tree species diversity (remove oak) most sensitive ecosystem is Canada’s most endangered: the Garry Oak Meadow Oaks are the favoured host
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Detection Pheromone trapping Deciding on a density International standards density related to previous year’s trapping results Egg mass sampling Tree banding (established populations only)
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Trapping Protocol Nanaimo, 1999
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Treatment Spraying Btk Gypchek (virus) Mass trapping Egg mass removal / Host removal Sterile male release Bio-control agents quarantines
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Spraying Methods Ground Spraying vegetation specific small areas can be treated access limited all day/ higher exposure rate to applicators and public inconvenient to residents can deny access
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Spraying Methods Aerial Spraying fast, completed in morning lowest cost per ha proven effectiveness can treat large areas “fear” of overhead spraying - noise aircraft safety weather dependent
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What is Btk? Bacillus thuringiensis var kurstaki Naturally occurring soil organism Over 30 types of Bt only kurstaki is specific to caterpillars HD-1 strain most effective other varieties for mosquitos, black flies, grubs
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Btk Mode of Action 2 forms of bacterium 1) vegetative (growing) form - non- insecticidal, common in soil 2) spore (resting) + crystallized endo-toxin protein
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Mode of Action Larva feeds on leaf eats spores and crystals alkaline gut dissolves crystal and enzymes break large protein into smaller toxic protein fragments these fragments bind with receptors on mid-gut wall and causes “leaks” death by bacterial infection and starvation
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Mode of Action
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Foray 48B One of many commercial Btk formulations (can’t patent Btk) Foray 48B the best for GM and other species 2.1% Btk, 90% water, 7.9% inerts (proprietary ingredients) secrecy of inerts creates controversy and hysteria inerts = fermentation by-products, stabilizers, stickers, UV protectors, preservatives
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Foray 48B cont’d Inerts improve the effectiveness of Btk by aiding spread, adherence to leaves, and protection from UV Ingredients known by Health Canada’s PMRA & US EPA formulation is a trade secret Coke vs. Pepsi rate: 4 l/ ha; about 1 coffee mug per average residential lot of which only a tablespoon is Btk
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How to conduct an aerial spray Get approval – legislation, gov’t backing, permits (PUP, DOT) Get the budget Buy the Btk Get the contractors set up Security Communications – key to successful program
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ISSUES To address concerns of the EAB and public, 3 studies commissioned Health surveillance study song bird study non-target lepidoptera Results: no significant impacts to humans or birds (confirms published info) non-target leps were depressed (no surprise) ~ concerns with rare & endangered
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“Believe it or not” Aerial spraying brings out emotions - mistrust of government, industry, unknown (too much X-files syndrome) “Silent Spring” mentality poor basic knowledge of biology, economics, health, concept of risk 604 & 250 syndrome BC highest users of alternative medicine
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“Believe it or Not” Spray responsible for: rain over Oak Bay broken shower door dogs with runny noses dead turtles dead flocks of birds “eerie stillness” around lake sick horses chronic fatigue, nausea, gout, failed marriages, etc. causing a crazed bug to deliberately fly into his eye mutated insects
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Questions?
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