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Buddleia leaf weevil in New Zealand 5yrs on Michelle Watson
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Overview Overview: The weed buddleia in forestry Buddleia in native forests biocontrol in forestry The insect Field releases what we found implications for forestry Another biocontrol agent? How to collect and redistribute the agent
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Buddleia (Buddleja davidii) Woody shrub from China Rapidly colonises disturbed sites Fine, wind-dispersed seed Able to flower 1 st yr, attain 4m in 2 yrs! Weed of plantation forests and natural areas buddleia flower
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Buddleia in forestry Reduces growth of plantation species Number 1 weed central Nth Is. Difficult to control with chemicals Cost forestry industry ~$2.9 million/yr control & lost production Buddleia control vital 3-5yrs after planting
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Buddleia in forestry 1 yr old stand
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Buddleia in native forests Colonises disturbed sites = stream beds & slip sites Alters plant communities, blocks access, shades rivers e.g. Te Urewera, Kaikoura Difficult to control due limited access
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Buddleia biocontrol in forestry Currently use herbicides to control buddleia But need to reduce chemical use (eg. FSC) Challenge of an integrated control method: Must impact buddleia within 3 years of planting Weeds must be kept less than 60% crop height Large areas of buddleia need to be controlled Agent must be highly mobile to locate new sites
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Buddleia leaf weevil (Cleopus japonicus) Leaf feeding weevil from China Larvae most damaging stage Weevils lay 1-20 eggs per day Weevils readily fly First released in NZ in spring 2006 4mm adult weevillarvaepupa
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Field releases 1000 weevils released at 5 sites spring 2006 Tracked dispersal, damage and agent numbers
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Established at all release sites Adults stop mating & laying eggs at high temps no larvae January Indicates do best moderate winter & summer What we found? February 2007March 2008
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Larvae present Sept to late May/early June Up to 95% defoliation in April 2008,’09, ’10 and ‘11 Heavy defoliation seen up to 5km from releases What we found?
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Other release sites Further releases made in areas where buddleia a pest Councils, forestry, gold mine 2007-2011 ~ 40 releases 200-500 weevils per release
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Distribution * Established at all release sites Most new location records in Bay of Plenty Dispersed over 50km from some release sites Still lots of sites not colonised by weevil, would benefit from being spread by you
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What we know about the agent: Able heavily defoliate buddleia Defoliation peaks in autumn Repeated defoliation Able to locate host plants further away - good adult flight ability
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What we know about the agent: Microclimate Preference for gullies Sunny, open areas Often exhaust their resource – new adults forced to seek new host plants to survive winter BUT, don’t know whether will colonise newly planted forests quickly enough, and impact
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Buddleia with agent Researching ability to colonise seedlings
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Number larvae correlated with damage *Treatment level averages, by distance, for all days after release. y = 10.62 x 0.33 R2 of 0.810
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Buddleia height is reduced End year 1= sig reduction in growth compared to insecticide-treated (control) plants Treated plants Untreated plants Values - least square means & standard errors
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Agent damage Known that > 30% defoliation needed to effectively suppress buddleia in forestry Created a model of feeding damage with distance Predict that by end Year 1= plants at distance 0 will be more than 30% defoliated Implications for forestry
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What does this all mean? Results indicate C. japonicus has the ability to suppress growth of buddleia seedlings At first this is close to the source population Repeated defoliation between & within yrs can be expected Implications for forestry
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Implications for buddleia biocontrol Buddleia has amazing ability to re-grow following defoliation At first responds by re-growing larger leaves Repeated defoliation needed to deplete plants reserves Plant reserves depleted after second year defoliation = fewer flowers, less foliage, less height growth
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Complimentary agent? Is another agent needed? Mecysolobus erro = stem boring weevil Causes stems to wilt and die More host-testing needed Difficult to re-collect and rear May attack spring growth when cleopus is less effective?
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Help spread this agent Adults most robust life stage Best collected in spring and autumn when easy to find Collect by beating buddleia whilst holding a beat sheet, tarp, or upside-down umbrella underneath Keep adults out of the sun in a ventilated container with buddleia stems Release ~20-50 adults on a clump of plants Contact Scion for advice on collection sites
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Funding by FRST & Better Border Biosecurity (B3) program Forestry companies: Rayonier, Hancock F.M., Timberlands, Pan Pac, Lake Taupo Forest Trust /NZ Forest Managers, Tempest & Associates Forestry, PF Olsen, et al. The Conservation Company Jenny Dymock, Des Pooley Other forestry companies and Councils with releases Royal Society of NZ Scion Forest Protection group Big thanks to…
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Implications for forestry C. japonicus will only be an economically successful buddleia control option in forestry if: disperses rapidly reduces growth of buddleia over entire stands effective within the first 3-5 yrs However, benefits from buddleia control > 3yrs easier for pruning & thinning roadside buddleia less vigorous reduced seed production ?
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