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The Bitter End.


Enticing agricultural pests to their last repast

Though it looks like any ordinary watermelon--and smells deliciously sweet--this mutant is no picnic treat. Its juicy red fruit is overwhelmingly bitter. Even a small nibble provokes an intense gagging reflex and imparts an aftertaste aftertaste /af·ter·taste/ (-tast?) a taste continuing after the substance producing it has been removed.

af·ter·taste
n.
 that lingers for close to an hour--unless you're an adult corn rootworm root·worm  
n.
Any of several beetles of the genus Diabrotica, the larvae of which feed on the roots of various crop plants, especially corn.
, also known as a cucumber beetle.

The juice of this mutant melon "tastes like a hot-fudge sundae to rootworms," explains Albert DeMilo, a chemist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Beltsville (Md.) Agricultural Research Center (BARC).

A student of this insect's taste preferences, DeMilo is helping concoct con·coct  
tr.v. con·coct·ed, con·coct·ing, con·cocts
1. To prepare by mixing ingredients, as in cooking.

2.
 tempting flavorings for pesticides that smite the rootworm, which costs U.S. farmers up to $1 billion annually.

Growers currently fight this scourge by lacing the soil with as much as 30 million pounds of poisons a year. Corn rootworm larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 are the target for roughly half of all insecticides applied to U.S. crops grown in rows. Though using some of the most toxic compounds in agriculture's arsenal, this chemical warfare has not routed the pest. In fact, rootworms have in many areas evolved a tolerance to some of these strong poisons.

Enter the BARC scientists, with their armloads of melons, gourds, and other natural products. Instead of targeting the larvae, which feed on the anchoring roots of corn and the rinds of melons, these researchers are developing a mean cuisine for the adults, beetles that feed on leaves and corn silk. The idea is to knock out to force out by a blow or by blows; as, to knock out the brains s>.

See also: Knock
 most of the beetles before they can plant their eggs--and next year's blight--in the ground. If the researchers succeed, farmers won't have to continue spreading chemicals onto the soil, a practice that risks contaminating groundwater and killing off a host of beneficial insects and worms.

Under the direction of entomologist Robert F. Schroder at BARC's Insect Biocontrol bi·o·con·trol  
n.
See biological control.



biocontrol  

See biological control.
 Laboratory, the researchers have been cooking up poison-laced recipes for the beetle's discriminating palate. His team wants to make a smorgasbord of pesticide treats so deliriously irresistible that the beetles will gorge.

Judging by the results of preliminary taste tests, the insects indeed find the scientists' bitter cuisine to-die-for.

Like most other melons, squashes, cucumbers, and gourds, the watermelon watermelon, plant (Citrullus vulgaris) of the family Curcurbitaceae (gourd family) native to Africa and introduced to America by Africans transported as slaves. Watermelons are now extensively cultivated in the United States and are popular also in S Russia.  that Schroder and his colleagues have enlisted in their war contains a chemical called cucurbitacin. Compared with grocery store watermelons, the mutant melon that they use has dramatically more of this compound, which belongs to a family of perhaps 15 bitter chemicals known as steroid terpenes terpenes (terˑ·pēnz),
n.pl a large-sized group of unsaturated hydrocarbons with the empirical formula (C5H8)n.
. These compounds, which many insects and vertebrates find unpalatable, evolved as natural pesticides.

The rootworm's unusual appetite for cucurbitacin apparently developed as a canny evolutionary ploy to appropriate the plants' defense. A bird needs to taste only one of these bitter insects--and promptly vomit it up--to learn an indelible lesson. With such an incentive, rootworms are passionate for the bitter chemical. Once entomologists The following is a list of entomologists, people who have studied insects.
Name Born Died Country Speciality
John Abbot 1751 1840 United States
 realized this, they began investigating cucurbitacin-rich flavorings for rootworm poisons.

In 1993, the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  approved the first bitter mixture for crop spraying. Carbaryl carbaryl (kär`bärəl): see insecticides. , a carbamate carbamate /car·ba·mate/ (kahr´bah-mat) any ester of carbamic acid.

car·ba·mate
n.
A salt or ester of carbamic acid.
 pesticide, is flavored with cucurbitacin-rich buffalo-gourd powder. Marketed under the trade names Slam, primarily for corn, and Adios, for other crops, it remains the only embittered em·bit·ter  
tr.v. em·bit·tered, em·bit·ter·ing, em·bit·ters
1. To make bitter in flavor.

2. To arouse bitter feelings in: was embittered by years of unrewarded labor.
 rootworm pesticide that is commercially available.

When blended with water and dispersed from a plane, the pesticide forms small droplets that dot the leaves of plants, beckoning beetles to their last meal. Aerial application of the cucurbitacin-baited pesticide allows farmers to reserve the poison for use only after the pest has invaded.

Today, however, most farmers apply unflavored carbaryl or other toxic pesticides to the soil without first determining whether rootworm larvae are present. Explains Larry Chandler of USDA's Northern Grain Insects Research Laboratory in Brookings, S.D., roughly half of the soil insecticides applied to combat rootworms probably are unnecessary. "The farmer uses them as insurance," he says, and as a preemptive strike.

Applying soil insecticides at planting--literally, as the tractor is laying down seed--adds no more than $10 per acre, says Chandler. Aerial application of Slam, by contrast, costs about $15 per treated acre--and another $3 to $7 per acre for the services of a beetle scout, who periodically surveys fields for signs of rootworms.

Farmers find it unnerving un·nerve  
tr.v. un·nerved, un·nerv·ing, un·nerves
1. To deprive of fortitude, strength, or firmness of purpose.

2. To make nervous or upset.
 to leave newly .planted fields untreated, says Chandler. So selling them on Slam has been difficult. Far fewer than half of corn growers in his region have been willing to adopt this strategy--despite some potential advantages.

For instance, in some years the scout doesn't find many beetles on plants, so spraying isn't needed. When it is required, about 5 percent as much Slam on the leaves can achieve the same kill rate as poisons applied to the soil. Furthermore, the embittered poison threatens little collateral damage collateral damage Surgery A popular term for any undesired but unavoidable co-morbidity associated with a therapy–eg, chemotherapy-induced CD to the BM and GI tract as a side effect of destroying tumor cells  to friendly insects--from ladybugs to parasitic wasps--that help growers by naturally attacking many pests.

Chandler has commissioned studies to pin down the precise cost differences between use of soil pesticides and aerial spraying with Slam. They will examine regional factors that affect the economics of farming. "Economics is going to drive many of the decisions that determine whether this is ever going to fly big-time," he predicts.

Schroder's group, thinks it has an Seven more tempting and environmentally friendly alternative--one whose merits may sway more farmers to try cucurbitacin baits for adult rootworms Their recipe starts with the beetle-pleasing juice of the mutant melons The poison additive they've picked is phloxine B, a photoactive photoactive /pho·to·ac·tive/ (-ak´tiv) reacting chemically to sunlight or ultraviolet radiation.

photoactive

reacting chemically to sunlight or ultraviolet radiation.
 chemical also known as red dye #28.

This commercial colorant col·or·ant  
n.
Something, especially a dye, pigment, ink, or paint, that colors or modifies the hue of something else.

adj.
Of or being a subtractive primary color.
 tints a number of cosmetics, such as lipsticks, and drugs, such as Pepto Bismal. It also has provided some of the pesticidal wallop in an experimental brew intended to kill Mediterranean and Mexican fruit flies (SN: 4/15/95, p. 237).

Dispersed from a plane, the dye-laced melon juice stains crop leaves with tiny carmine carmine /car·mine/ (kahr´min) a red coloring matter used as a histologic stain.

indigo carmine  indigotindisulfonate sodium.


car·mine
n.
 dots. When the rootworm beetle encounters them, it stops to feed on a treat considerably more enticing than the plant it had intended to eat. As it gorges on dot after dot, the bug's body acquires a deepening blush.

Exposure to sunlight unleashes toxic chemical reactions in the now crimson bug. "We're not sure what happens," Schroder acknowledges. His best guess is that the light triggers oxidation reactions that damage tissues throughout the pest's body. In field trials, 5 minutes of sunlight killed red-dyed beetles.

As with Slam, Schroder notes, "only the targeted rootworms should be tempted to eat the pesticide." Beneficial insects, which avoid the bitter taste, can visit sprayed fields with impunity. The dyed juice should prove no risk to people's health, he adds. The additive already colors products humans ingest, and the cucurbitacin concentrations are extremely low--less than 1 gram per acre.

Since early spring, USDA USDA,
n.pr See United States Department of Agriculture.
 has had a group of farmers ready to try the baited dye on their fields, but they must wait for EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
 approval. Schroder says, "We've got the juice, the planes are ready--even the sprayers are lined up."

What's the holdup? EPA has required toxicity data to determine any potential danger for workers who handle and spray the photoactive dye in sunlight. The USDA had hoped to use data submitted by the company that is trying to commercialize the red dye to kill fruit flies. However, those data have turned out to be inadequate, acknowledges Phyllis A. Martin, a microbiologist working at BARC.

"There were deficiencies in the [dye's] registration application," agrees EPA spokeswoman Ellen Kramer, "and they have not been addressed yet."

If the dye-toxicity studies must be repeated, field trials with the melon juice may have to wait a season or be conducted using a more conventional pesticide, such as carbaryl, as the poison.

Meanwhile, cucumber growers in North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 are anxious to try the experimental red-dyed melon concentrate, asserts entomologist Bill Jester of the North Carolina State University History

Main article: History of North Carolina State University
The North Carolina General Assembly founded NC State on March 7, 1887 as a land-grant college under the name North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts.
 Cooperative Extension Service Cooperative Extension Service, in the United States, publicly supported, informal adult education and development organization. Established in 1914 by the Smith-Lever Act, it constitutes one of the largest adult education programs in the world and consists of three  in Kinston. Their motivation, he says, is concern for honey bees. With parasite infections having killed so many bee colonies in recent years (SN: 6/29/96, p.406), growers have become very protective of those pollinators that remain and are keen to test insecticides that would minimize ancillary damage to honey bees, he says.

Farmers need a broad arsenal of weapons so they can tailor the attacks on rootworms according to the crop, conditions, and the insects' resistance to pesticides.

Both Slam and Adios rely on carbaryl to kill adult rootworms. "We know that we probably need to develop some alternative active ingredients," says Morris Gaskins gas·kin  
n.
1. The part of the hind leg of a horse or related animal between the stifle and the hock.

2. gaskins Obsolete Galligaskins.



[Probably short for galligaskins.]
 of Micro Flo Co., the products' Memphis-based manufacturer. Moreover, Gaskins notes that the company is seeking alternatives to buffalo-gourd root as its source of cucurbitacin. "We have found several varieties of cucumbers that have extremely high concentrations of these compounds and are much easier to grow," he says.

Schroder's group is also investigating an alternative source of cucurbitacin: the root of a wild Brazilian plant called taiuia. Schroder and USDA ecologist Guillermo Cabrera Walsh, based in Buenos Aires, independently encountered South American corn growers who were extolling taiuia's ability to lure rootworm beetles away from their crops. Local farmers sliced the cassava-like root, soaked it overnight in insecticide, then set it out in the fields as bait.

Cabrera Walsh's experiments with taiuia indicate that this plant actually "draws cucumber beetles away from the corn--often from quite a distance." He even sprays extracts of it on cloth as a bait to collect live beetles for study. In contrast, insects have to contact the cucurbitacin in buffalo gourd gourd (gôrd, grd), common name for some members of the Cucurbitaceae, a family of plants whose range includes all tropical and subtropical areas and extends into the temperate zones.  and the bitter melon bitter melon,
n Latin name:
Momordica charantia L.; parts used: fruit, seeds, seed oil, leaves; uses: antidiabetic, antiinfective, antipyretic, anthelmintic, laxative, possible antifungal, androgenic, antiviral, antimalarial actions; possibly
 before they feed on it.

"In theory, [all] the cucurbitacin molecules are too heavy to become airborne," Cabrera Walsh says. This suggests that some other agent in the root may be the airborne lure that rings a dinner bell for the pest. "So, we are trying to investigate that--because an attractant attractant

a material used to attract animals for capture purposes.
, if it were a different substance [than the bitter compound]--could be important" as an adjunct to any future pesticides.

Indeed, if it worked well enough, a bait in traps between crop rows might obviate the need to actually treat plants directly.

The important thing to remember, Chandler cautions, is that no matter how well it works, no insecticide is likely to eradicate a pest. "The best we can hope for is to control it" at a cost that doesn't prove prohibitive, he says.

For corn and other crops, the bitter medicines under development offer not only a partial cure to their rootworm ills, but one having a minimum of environmental side effects.

RELATED ARTICLE: Rootworms: A U.S. export?

Until 1992, corn rootworms were a distinctly American phenomenon. Then, the scourge took a Balkan vacation--and found the venue so hospitable that it stayed.

Because the first beetles outside the Americas were sighted in corn fields just outside an airport in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, it appears that the insect hitched a jet ride, notes entomologist C. Richard Edwards of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. It probably began its air travel in the Midwest. Indeed, the rootworm infesting Belgrade fields is identical to the pest, known as the western corn rootworm The Western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte, is one of the most devastating corn rootworm species in North America, especially in the midwestern corn-growing areas such as Iowa. A related species, the Northern corn rootworm, D. , plaguing crops in Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana. This variety bears the name Diabrotica virgifera virgifera. Elsewhere in the United States, related Diabrotica species often dominate.

Shortly after the initial Belgrade sighting, Yugoslav officials put out an international call for help. Neither the United States nor United Nations came through with assistance, Edwards notes, owing to their sanctions against the nation for its actions in Bosnia. As coordinator of the regional rootworm-management program for Illinois and Indiana, Edwards unofficially offered his expertise.

For the past 4 years, he has been mapping the insect's advance. By 1996, it had spread to Hungary, Romania, and Croatia. Since then, scouts have spied it in Bulgaria, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Italy. The insect currently stands poised to invade Spain, France, Germany, and Portugal, Edwards says.

Rootworm infestations have become severe in only 8 percent of the affected area--all of it in Yugoslavia. There, corn yields have fallen by at least 20 percent, typically 36 bushels per acre, which is similar to what farmers in the U.S. corn belt experience. Unlike their U.S. counterparts, many of the Yugoslav farmers cannot afford to fight the blight, he says.

On sabbatical last year with the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, Edwards helped launch a permanent European monitoring program for the insect. He also initiated a model aerial-control program using Slam, the only commercial bitter-baited insecticide.

In many ways, Edwards says, the bitter bait is well suited for these small farmers. A single plane can hit many fields at once, ensuring areawide control of the bug.

Having already dispersed over almost 46,000 square miles, an area the size of Pennsylvania, this blight represents "the most important introduction of an agricultural-crop pest into Europe since the Colorado potato beetle's arrival there in 1876," says Edwards.

--J.R.

RELATED ARTICLE: Different pest, similar tactic

A corn earworm moth feeds on the Nectar of a Gaura plant, a night-blooming relative of evening primrose. This insect costs U.S. farmers $2 billion annually. USDA scientists in College Station, Texas College Station is a city in Brazos County, Texas, situated in Central Texas. It is located in the heart of the Brazos Valley. The city is located within the most populated region of Texas, near to three of the 10 largest cities in the United States - Houston, Dallas, and San , are working to harness chemicals responsible for this flower's perfumed scent to attract the earworm--also known as the cotton bollworm bollworm, name for the larvae of two different moths. The pink bollworm is a serious pest of cotton, and the corn earworm, or cotton bollworm, attacks cotton, corn, and other crops. , tomato fruit worm, and sorghum sorghum, tall, coarse annual (Sorghum vulgare) of the family Gramineae (grass family), somewhat similar in appearance to corn (but having the grain in a panicle rather than an ear) and used for much the same purposes.  head worm--to pesticides. As with the lethal treats being designed for rootworms, trace quantities of the earworm earworm

infestation of the ears of cattle by rhabditisbovis, often complicated by blowfly infestation.
 poisons would be dissolved in a liquid tailored to the pest's palate. That will probably be sugars, explains Juan Lopez Jr., an entomologist who's been working on the project for 8 years.

--J.R.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:insecticides that taste good to bugs
Author:RALOFF, JANET
Publication:Science News
Date:Jul 10, 1999
Words:2250
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