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Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
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Six step process for identifying, testing, releasing, and managing biological control agents:

  1. Recognize that an exotic species is, or may become, an invasive threat.
  2. Conduct exploratory surveys for potential biological control agents in the invasive plant’s native range.
  3. Screen the most promising agents for host specificity (that is, ecological safety).
  4. Apply for permission to release the biological control agent.
  5. Establish self-perpetuating populations of safe biological control agents.
  6. Develop management strategies to enhance efficacy of naturalized biological control agents.

Biological control agents for selected invasive plant species.

Alternanthera philoxeroides (Alligatorweed):

Agasicles hygrophila

Amynothrips andersoni

 

Arcola malloi

 

Pistia stratiotes (Waterlettuce):

Neohydronomus affinis

Spodoptera pectinicornis

 

Hydrilla verticillata (Hydrilla):

Bagous affinis

 

Bagous hydrillae

 

Hydrellia pakistanae

Hydrellia balciunasi

 

Melaleuca quinquenervia (Paperbark tree):

Oxyops vitiosa

Boreioglycaspis melaleucae

 

Fergusonina turneri 

 

Salvinia molesta (Giant water fern):

Cyrtobagous salviniae

Eichhornia crassipes (Waterhyacinth):

Neochetina eichhorniae

Neochetina bruchi

 

Niphograpta albiguttalis

 

Lygodium microphyllum (Old-world climbing fern):

Cataclysta camptozonale (released 1st qtr, 2005)

Renamed Austromusotima camptozonale


   
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Last Modified: 03/31/2006
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