Exploratory field surveys of the natural enemies associated with balloon vine Cardiospermum grandiflorum Swartz, an environmental weed in South Africa, Australia and other countries, were conducted in northern Argentina from 2005 to 2009. The surveys included other plant species in the genus Cardiospermum and other native Sapindaceae, permitting an assessment of the distribution and host range of the natural enemies.Seventeen phytophagous insects in five orders and ten families, and two fungal pathogens were found. The nature of the potential agents' damage, their field distribution and abundance, and the results of preliminary host-specificity testing indicated that the seedfeeding weevil Cissoanthonomus tuberculipennis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) and the fruitgalling midge Contarinia sp. (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) were the most promising biological control agents for C. grandiflorum outside of its native range.
Invasive alien plant species negatively affect agricultural production, degrade conservation areas, reduce water supplies, and increase the intensity of wild fires. Since 1913, biological control agents i.e. plant-feeding insects, mites, and fungal pathogens, have been deployed in South Africa to supplement other management practices (herbicides and mechanical controls) used against these invasive plant species. We do not describe the biological control agent species
The root-feeding flea beetle, Longitarsus sp. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Alticinae), was studied as a potential biological control agent for Lantana camara L. (Verbenaceae) in South Africa. Host range tests were carried out on 52 plant species in 11 families. Although 11 plant species, all in the family Verbenaceae, supported complete development of Longitarsus sp. during no-choice tests, the beetles showed very strong preferences for L. camara during paired-choice and multi-choice tests. The results confirm that the beetles have a narrow host range, and that under natural conditions they are highly unlikely to utilise plants other than L. camara. In the unlikely event that some of the Lippia spp. are attacked in the field, they are not expected to sustain populations of the flea beetle over time. Attributes that should enhance the biocontrol potential of Longitarsus sp. include: the adults are long-lived and highly mobile; and, the larvae cause extensive direct damage to the roots of L. camara, which could in turn expose the plants to soil-born pathogens. All indications are that Longitarsus sp. could make a substantial contribution to the biological control of L. camara in many countries around the world because the beetles pose no threat to non-target plant species and they damage a part of the plant (i.e. roots) not yet affected by any other agent species.
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