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Bio control agent released to save willow trees

A biological control agent for giant willow aphid has been identified and tested by Scion entomologists, approved and released in New Zealand. Source: Timberbiz

Giant willow aphid (Tuberolachnus salignus), or GWA, was first reported in New Zealand in 2013. The aphids feed on willow sap, damaging and occasionally killing the trees.

Willows are widely used in New Zealand for slope stabilisation, flood protection, crop and livestock shelter, fodder and as pollen and nectar sources for honeybees in early spring.

The aphids also secrete copious amounts of honeydew, which attracts insects such as honeybees and pest wasps. Honey made from the honeydew is granular and cannot be extracted from the comb, and bees are at risk of being killed by the wasps. Excess honey dew also causes sooty mould to grow on and beneath infested trees.

Biological control, where natural enemies control a pest, is a cost effective, sustain-able and environmentally sound control method. While GWA has very few natural enemies in New Zealand, Scion scientists found evidence of parasitism in natural populations of GWA in California by the parasitoid wasp Pauesia nigrovaria.

The parasitoid wasp lays an egg in the aphid, a larva hatches, and this then eats and eventually kills the aphid host as it develops. In two to three weeks a new adult parasitoid emerges from the dead aphid.

Stringent testing is needed before a biological control agent is released. The first parasitoids were imported into containment at Scion in 2017, followed by host specificity testing using non-target aphid species to ensure the parasitoid only at-tacked GWA. Following favourable results, an application to the Environmental Protection Authority was successful, with permission to release granted in December 2019.

Parasitoids wasps have been released by Scion and partners via a New Zealand-wide community effort. Scion shipped mated female parasitoids to beekeepers, regional council staff and others for release on infested trees.