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Public Release Date: July 8, 2007
Contact:
Dr. James Ogwang
jogwang@naro-ug.org
jamesogwang@hotmail.com
256-39-700-725
Brian Hyps
bhyps@aspb.org
301-251-0560, ext. 114
Dr. Beatrice Grabowski
bgrabowski@earthlink.net
301-871-1962
Successful Biocontrol of Invasive Water Hyacinth Contributes to Socioeconomic
and Health Improvements in Africa's Lake Victoria Region
In research that will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Society
of Plant Biologists (ASPB) in Chicago (July 7-11, 2007), scientists implemented
a successful bioeradication program of an invasive water weed in Africa's Lake
Victoria. Two insect biocontrol species, weevils in the genus Neochetina, were
used, along with mechanical removal, to control the highly invasive water hyacinth,
which has also plagued waterways in the southern United States. This method
of water hyacinth biocontrol, originally researched and implemented in Florida
in the 1970s, eliminates or drastically reduces the use of pesticides. In the
Lake Victoria region, water hyacinth threatened livelihoods of local communities
by reducing fish populations, fouling hydroelectric power turbines, and providing
habitats for malaria and schistosomiasis vectors. Similar biocontrol programs
have been successfully applied throughout the tropics and subtropics.
Water hyacinth, Eichhornia crassipes, is one of the most invasive water weeds
in the world. A native of South America, it was spread throughout the tropics
and subtropics in the last century, mostly by humans. While the plant can potentially
be used for sewage treatment and biofuel production, it can also cause severe
environmental and socioeconomic damage.
Dr. James Ogwang, a biocontrol entomologist with the Uganda National Agricultural
Research Organization, and his colleagues, implemented a successful program
that rid Lake Victoria of the weed. The control strategy integrated mechanical
removal and use of two insects that are natural enemies of the weed--weevils
in the genus Neochetina--N. bruchi and N. eichhorniae, both natives of South
America.
Dr. Ogwang's work on the Lake Victoria water hyacinth eradication program was
recently featured on National Geographic's television series, Strange Days on
Planet Earth. He will be giving a presentation on this work at the annual meeting
of the American Society of Plant Biologists in Chicago (July 8, 2007, 10:50
AM) in a major symposium on Plant Biology in Sub-Saharan Africa organized by
Debby Delmer of UC Davis.
Water hyacinth was first observed around Lake Victoria in 1989 and by the late
1990s was choking out most of the shoreline. Lake Victoria, located in east
central Africa and bordered by Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya, is the second largest
freshwater lake in the world in surface area. It is located in the same region
as Africa's Great Rift Valley System, an area of tectonic rifting and ancient
volcanic activity, which is considered to be the cradle of human evolution.
The lake itself is a natural laboratory of evolutionary biology because of its
diverse cichlid fish populations, and it has provided livelihoods for humans
for many thousands of years.
With no natural enemies in Africa, the water hyacinth proliferated around Lake
Victoria and resulted in reduced fish catches and biodiversity. It interfered
with water transport and blocked hydroelectric power turbines, resulting in
a severe drop in the supply of electricity. Human health was also threatened
because the large weed mats created breeding habitat for the vectors of malaria
and schistosomiasis. Rotting vegetation contaminated drinking water, increasing
cases of gastrointestinal diseases.
Dr. Ogwang and his colleagues used the natural predators of the plant to help
eradicate it--the mottled water hyacinth weevil, N. eichhorniae, and the chevroned
water hyacinth weevil, N. bruchi. Both adults and larvae feed on the plants.
The Neochetina larvae tunnel into the plant, allowing invasion by opportunistic
bacteria and fungi. Additionally, water enters the tunnels and causes the plant
mats to sink as the plants deteriorate further. Wind and wave action can accelerate
the destruction of the weed started by the insects. No herbicide spraying was
used in the Ugandan program, only mechanical removal and biocontrol, yet by
2000, 90% of the weed was cleared from the lake. The result of this remarkable
program resulted in reduced cases of disease, increased power generation, and
increased production of fish for export (mainly the Nile Perch).
Dr. Ogwang has also worked on other successful biocontrol programs to eradicate
pests of citrus, cabbage, and cassava. He credits the development of his interest
in biocontrol entomology to the traditional farmers in the village where he
grew up. These farmers practiced conservation and use of a predatory ant, Lepisiota
sp., to control cotton bollworms, a practice still used in organic cotton farming
in Uganda. Similar biocontrol programs for water hyacinth have been successfully
used throughout the tropics and subtropics, as well as in the U.S., in Florida,
Louisiana, and Mississippi. Dr. Ted Center, Research Leader at the ARS/USDA
Invasive Plant Research Laboratory in Fort Lauderdale, was involved in the original
ARS/USDA research in the 1970s that initiated use of the Neochetina weevils
as biocontrol agents of water hyacinth. He credits the success of the same biocontrol
program at Lake Victoria to Dr. Ogwang and his team. Along with collaborators
from Africa, Australia, and South America, the Florida facility continues to
research new biocontrol agents to improve the stability of the control provided
by existing ones.
Biological control programs can present some hazards. The risks of introducing
non-native predatory species must be carefully evaluated before they are introduced.
These risks include invasiveness by the control agents themselves and unintended
effects on non-target species. Biocontrol agents must also be carefully monitored
after introduction for any unforeseen environmental changes. However, the benefits
of these programs are elimination or reduction of the use of pesticides, thereby
enabling sustainable economies, and lowering the costs of farming, especially
in resource-poor areas.
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ASPB, headquartered in Rockville, Maryland, was founded in 1924. This professional
society has a membership of nearly 5,000 plant scientists from the United States
and more than 50 other nations. ASPB publishes two of the most widely cited
plant science journals in the world: The Plant Cell and Plant Physiology.
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