Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Butterfly that damages citrus trees has arrived

- By Bill Kearney

The lime swallowtai­l butterfly — an invasive species that hails from Asia and which has damaged citrus trees throughout the Caribbean for nearly 20 years — has reached Florida.

The butterfly is fairly large, with a wingspan of nearly four inches, similar to that of a monarch, and can be quite beautiful, as if Jackson Pollock made blackand-white splatter paintings across their wings and added a bold red dot at the base.

The butterfly’s various larval stages ravenously consume citrus foliage, which can expose fruit to too much sunlight, and weaken the tree.

Last fall, residents in Key West found specimens on their backyard citrus trees, and the Department of Agricultur­e swept in.

“We had a homeowner who was a butterfly aficionado and took a picture ... that’s what kicked things off,” said Trevor Smith of the Florida Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services. “I sent a team down immediatel­y.”

State officials collected the suspicious larvae, conducted DNA sequencing and concluded that the Key West bugs were indeed the destructiv­e culprits from the Caribbean.

Since then, the state has broadened its search to the middle and upper Keys and not found any lime swallowtai­ls. “It’s only in Key West that we’ve found any, and in the last two surveys, we haven’t found any,” Smith said.

Lime swallowtai­ls, indigenous to Asia, first showed up in the Dominican Republic in 2004, made their way to Puerto Rico in 2006, and have since flitted their way to Jamaica, the Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands and Cuba.

Damage

How much damage can the lime swallowtai­ls do? The larval stages are when they do the damage, and they spend their whole lifecycle on one tree. Early larval stages look like bird droppings, but later stages are large and green.

Jamaica’s Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries website says, “The lime swallowtai­l butterfly … is known to destroy citrus plants in Jamaica. The pest eats the leaves of orange and ortanique trees, leaving the fruits open to the sun.”

According to the California Department of Food and Agricultur­e, lime swallowtai­l larvae consume large amounts of foliage and can seriously damage host trees.

“This is of special concern to citrus nursery stock, as young citrus trees are most severely affected by larval feeding,” the site says. “Severe infestatio­n causes tree defoliatio­n and can even lead to growth retardatio­n and decreased fruit yields.”

How did the invasive butterflie­s get here? Smith has a hunch, but no proof.

“This is purely speculatio­n, but this species is in Cuba, and at one point Hurricane Ian was literally straddling Key West and Cuba at the same time,” Smith said. “Looking at the numbers, and how small this population is, I wouldn’t be surprised if this wasn’t something that was moved over by the hurricane.”

It’s not yet clear if there are enough lime swallowtai­l here to make a viable population. “We had a really small population, and we jumped on it so quickly that we might already be at a point where it’s not a large enough population to be viable,” Smith said.

If the species did eventually establish a successful breeding population in Florida, Smith said he thinks it would be a minor pest. “For backyard citrus, this could be a real pain for people,” he said, but not so much for the citrus industry. “Most of your commercial growers right now are hitting citrus so hard with pesticides to deal with all these different diseases, they have a pretty stout defense set up. I don’t think this butterfly would make any inroads there.”

Coming to America

North America has been fertile ground for invasive insects before. Most recently, the spotted lanternfly, which hails from China, has sent authoritie­s in the northeast into a tizzy. Officials have urged people to kill them on sight.

According to the USDA website, the spotted lanternfly first showed up in Pennsylvan­ia in 2014. “If allowed to spread in the United States, this pest could seriously impact the country’s grape, orchard, and logging industries,” the site says, and boasts flyers with slogans such as “Join the battle. Beat the Bug,” and “Stop. Scape. Squash.”

The spotted lanternfly has spread throughout the mid-Atlantic and into New York state and Southern New England, and can weaken and sicken more than 70 species of tree by feeding on their sap.

If you find a lime swallowtai­l

If someone finds a larvae or a butterfly, they should get in touch with the Florida Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services plant division at www.fdacs. gov/Divisions-Offices/ Plant-Industry.

Smith advised that if the larvae is on a citrus tree in Key West, go ahead and collect it and put it in a jar in the freezer so his team can examine it at a later date.

Though there’s some concern that people might confuse the lime swallowtai­l with the endangered Schaus’ swallowtai­l, Smith said it is safe to collect specimens in Key West because the Schaus’ swallowtai­l does not exist there.

“If it’s on a citrus tree, just go ahead and take a sample,” he said. “Having those extra eyes out there doing the work is critical.”

Local birds and reptiles, too, can make a difference.

“Those animals can be very effecting with invasive insects — when you have these small numbers [of invasive butterflie­s], something as simple as a gecko eating a few of these caterpilla­rs could change the whole nature of whether this population can establish,” Smith said.

 ?? KEVIN BURNETTE/ FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTUR­E AND CONSUMER SERVICES ?? The dorsal view of a lime swallowtai­l butterfly. The invasive species, which hails from Asia and has damaged citrus trees in the Caribbean for 20 years, has been found in Key West.
KEVIN BURNETTE/ FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTUR­E AND CONSUMER SERVICES The dorsal view of a lime swallowtai­l butterfly. The invasive species, which hails from Asia and has damaged citrus trees in the Caribbean for 20 years, has been found in Key West.

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