Text Only
Search

Using Sex Appeal to Fight a Pest

19 February 2008
MP3 - Download (MP3) audio clip
MP3 - Listen to (MP3) audio clip
RealAudio - Download audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

Back in the year two thousand, big producers of poplar trees in the American Pacific Northwest needed help. Their hybrid poplars, nearly ten years old, were under threat. Young insects were getting into the heartwood, weakening a tree and making it likely to break and fall. Small, newly planted trees were being killed.

Two professors from Washington State University discovered that the threat was not from traditional poplar pests but from a new one.

Doug Walsh and John Brown found ninety-five western poplar clearwing moths in traps in a four-week period in two thousand one. Then, during a four-week period in two thousand two, they found more than eighteen thousand moths in traps placed in the same locations.

Unlike most moths, this one is active during the day. As a defense, it can make itself look like a yellow jacket.

It was a threat to fourteen thousand hectares of poplar planted in eastern Washington state and Oregon. The producers used twenty thousand kilograms of a pesticide, Lorsban, in two thousand two to try to control the outbreak. But that and other poisons failed to stop the moths.

So the professors asked for help from an expert at the University of California, Riverside. Years earlier, Jocelyn Millar had copied the sex pheromone of the clearwing moth.

Pheromones produce chemical signals that animals and insects use to identify friends and enemies. Pheromones also attract the opposite sex. The Washington State team had used Jocelyn Millar's version of the pheromone in the traps.  

The researchers began treating poplars with the synthetic pheromone in two thousand three. The idea was to confuse male moths. They would sense the presence of females and not be able to find them, and that would interfere with reproduction.

After the success of tests, and improvements to the treatment, it won full approval from the United States Environmental Protection Agency. That was in two thousand six.

Professor Brown says the synthetic pheromone is safe so workers can re-enter a forest after a few hours. And only small amounts are needed -- as little as one gram per two and a half hectares. Professor Walsh says the treatment reduces clearwing moth populations quickly. Today, the population is under control, but preventive treatments continue.

And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Featured Story
American History Series: The Last Days, and Lasting Influence, of Thomas Jefferson  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Schools Look to Save Money With Four-Day Week  Audio Clip Available
Going for the Gold at the Olympics in Beijing  Audio Clip Available
Dr. Michael DeBakey's Long and Productive Life  Audio Clip Available
Probable Sale of America’s Largest Sugar Cane Grower Pleases Activists for Everglades  Audio Clip Available
Aspirin: How Research Keeps Giving New Life to an Ancient Medicine  Audio Clip Available
What Is Your Favorite Song About Summer?  Audio Clip Available
A Gift of Clear Vision in Developing Countries  Audio Clip Available
Sydney Pollack, 1934-2008: He Directed, Produced and Acted in Many Popular Hollywood Movies  Audio Clip Available
Ace in the Hole: Put on Your Poker Face  Audio Clip Available
How Lil Wayne Became a Big Name in Rap With a Voice All His Own  Audio Clip Available
Rescuing Fannie, Freddie as US Economy Faces 'Numerous Difficulties'  Audio Clip Available