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Research Project: Biology and Control of Invasive Weeds in the Western Us

Location: Exotic and Invasive Weeds Research

Title: Biological Control of Yellow Starthistle: New Prospects for An Old Problem.

Authors
item Smith, Lincoln - link
item Cristofaro, Massimo - ENEA C.R. CASACCIA
item Pitcairn, Michael - CDFA
item Bruckart, William - bill
item Woods, Dale - CDFA
item Widmer, Timothy
item Berner, Dana
item Drew, Allison

Submitted to: Ecological Society Of America Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: July 14, 2004
Publication Date: August 1, 2004
Publisher's URL: http://abstracts.co.allenpress.com/pweb/esa2004/document/?ID=43402
Citation: Smith, L., Cristofaro, M., Pitcairn, M., Bruckart, W.L., Woods, D., Widmer, T.L., Berner, D.K., Drew, A.E. 2004. Biological Control Of Yellow Starthistle: New Prospects For An Old Problem.. Ecological Society Of America Proceedings.

Technical Abstract: Yellow starthistle (YST) is an invasive alien weed from the Mediterranean region that infests about 20 million acres in the western U.S. This noxious weed displaces native plants, elevates the risk of wildfire, and diminishes the value of rangeland for grazing and recreational use. A classical biological control program, initiated in the late 1960s, resulted in establishment of six species of seedhead-feeding insects. Several introduced insects are now widespread; however, they have not reduced plant densities at most locations to acceptable levels. A rust pathogen was approved for biological control of YST in California in 2003 and is now being distributed and evaluated. Foreign exploration has been expanded in Turkey and southern Russia to search for new agents that attack other parts of the plant. New prospects, several of which are new species, include a weevil that attacks the root crown (in the final stage of evaluation), flea beetle, leaf beetle, leaf-mining flea weevil, stem-boring weevil, blister mite, lace bug, rosette fly, tip-galling caterpillar, seedhead weevil, and several fungal pathogens. The diversity of prospective agents greatly increases our chances of finding some that are suitably host specific and sufficiently damaging to reduce yellow starthistle populations to innocuous levels in the U.S.

 
Project Team
Carruthers, Raymond - Ray
Spencer, David - Dave
Smith, Lincoln - Link
Balciunas, Joseph - Joe

Publications

Related National Programs
  Rangeland, Pasture, and Forages (205)
  Crop Protection & Quarantine (304)

Related Projects
   Biological Control of Saltcedar and Perennial Pepperweed
   Biological Based Control for the Areawide Management of Exotic and Invasive Weeds
   Integrated Control and Assessment of Knapweed and Cheatgrass on Department of Defense Installations
   Biological Control of Saltcedar in Wyoming
   Biological Control of Saltcedar in Texas
   Biological Control of Saltcedar in New Mexico
   Biological Contrl of Saltcedar in Nevada
   Promoting Development of Biological Control Agents for Cape Ivy, a South African Vine Threatening California's Natural Areas
   Biological Control of Exotic Weeds in the West
   Biological Control of Exotic Weeds in the West
   Saltcedar Biological Control
   Biocontrol of Yst and Tumbleweed (Russian Thistle): Development of New Agents to Release

 
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