Albuquerque Journal

Invasive beetles threaten Florida’s avocado groves

Species already responsibl­e for loss of 300M redbay trees

- BY JANET MCCONNAUGH­EY

NEW ORLEANS — A lone female fungus-farming beetle inadverten­tly imported to Georgia may have been the source of a disease that has killed some 300 million redbay trees and threatens Florida’s avocado groves, researcher­s from Mississipp­i and Florida say.

Clones of the beetle and her fungus have spread west into Texas and north to North Carolina over the past 15 years, said researcher John Riggins of the Mississipp­i State University Extension Service. He said they could spread nearly to Canada on sassafras, the source of the powder used to thicken filé (FEE-lay) gumbo.

“Filé and guacamole could definitely be endangered,” Riggins said Wednesday.

Bay leaves used for cooking could also face problems if this species gets into the Mediterran­ean areas where bay laurels are cultivated and grow wild, say University of Florida researcher­s.

The U.S. infections all apparently come from one itty bitty beetle and her clones. Females of this species are about 2 millimeter­s long — about as long as a nickel is thick — and males are much smaller.

If there’s no male around, females lay eggs that mostly hatch into males, with which they and their few daughters mate. From those matings come eggs of both sexes. Because the original beetle didn’t mate with a male, all of those descendant­s have only her DNA, making them geneticall­y identical.

Ambrosia beetles aren’t the only insects that don’t need sex to reproduce. Stick insects, aphids, and some ants and wasps also reproduce asexually.

Smith, Riggins and others published research earlier this year in “Biological Invasions,” reporting that both beetles and fungus from across the insect’s U.S. range were geneticall­y identical.

“These beetles are very inbred,” said Robert Rabaglia, a U.S. Forest Service entomologi­st. “So yeah. It could be one beetle, it could be a couple of beetles all related to each other.”

The insects are among 3,500 species of ambrosia beetles, a family named not for genetic kinship but because they all carry around one sort of fungus or another and plant it in trees to grow as their food.

There’s no telling what cargo brought this species, called Xyleborus glabratus or the redbay ambrosia beetle, to the port of Savannah. It might have been plants, but the original beetle probably had burrowed into a cargo pallet or bracing wood used inside a cargo container, Riggins said.

Ambrosia beetles generally bore into dead or sickly trees. So scientists weren’t worried when a few turned up in 2002, in survey traps near the port.

“For about two years it literally flew under the radar,” Riggins said. “It wasn’t until trees started to die around Jekyll Island that they started to investigat­e.”

Redbays don’t lose their glossy, 6-inch long leaves in winter. So when they turned brown and died, it was clear something was very wrong.

It was the beetle’s fungus. Because it kills members of the laurel family, the disease was named laurel wilt or laurel rot. Related and affected trees include avocado, sassafras and at least two endangered plants: pondberry and pond spice, Riggins said.

He said he’s visited some Florida avocado groves “where it looks like a biological bomb exploded. If it’s not treated, the entire grove turns brown and wilts.”

If the disease is found quickly, infected trees can be removed and burned, while those nearby are treated with fungicide.

 ?? JOHN RIGGINS/MISS. AGRICULTUR­AL AND FORESTRY EXPERIMENT STATION ?? Dead redbay trees line the Pascagoula River in Jackson County near Moss Point, Mississipp­i. The redbay ambrosia beetle has devastated the area’s redbay trees.
JOHN RIGGINS/MISS. AGRICULTUR­AL AND FORESTRY EXPERIMENT STATION Dead redbay trees line the Pascagoula River in Jackson County near Moss Point, Mississipp­i. The redbay ambrosia beetle has devastated the area’s redbay trees.
 ?? MISS. ENTOMOLOGI­CAL MUSEUM ?? The redbay ambrosia beetle carries a fungus that is devastatin­g to trees and shrubs in the laurel family.
MISS. ENTOMOLOGI­CAL MUSEUM The redbay ambrosia beetle carries a fungus that is devastatin­g to trees and shrubs in the laurel family.

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