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Rob Williams

Invasive Bagrada bug may cause ‘stink’ in South Central Texas

June 9, 2017 by Rob Williams

by Paul Schattenberg, Texas A&M AgriLife Communications

Bagrada bug on white paper
The Bagrada bug, an invasive stink bug which feeds primarily on plants in the cole family, such as broccoli and cabbage, has been found in South Central Texas. (Photo by Dr. Salvador Vitanza)

SAN MARCOS — The Bagrada bug, Bagrada hilaris, an invasive stink bug that has been slowly spreading through the southwestern U.S. for the past decade, has recently been reported in Hays County, said a Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service entomologist.

“This bug can cause serious crop damage as well as cause damage to plants in commercial nurseries and home gardens and landscapes,” said Molly Keck, AgriLife Extension entomologist and integrated pest management specialist, Bexar County.

Keck said adult Bagrada bugs have the same coloring as harlequin bugs, but are about one-third to one-half their size with smaller orange markings and no white markings.

She said the Bagrada bug is primarily a pest of cole crops in the mustard family, or Brassicas, including brassicaceous weeds such as wild mustard.

“Bagrada bug prefers plants such as broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, collards, kale, radishes and brussels sprouts,” she said. “However, it is also known to feed on cotton, Sudan grass and Bermuda grass.

Keck said the bug has needle-like mouthparts used to penetrate and feed on plants and young seeds. They can cause a range of damage from leaf spotting, wilting or stunting, which can result in the plant not producing a flower, heads not forming, or even death of the plant.”

She said a high concentration of Bagrada bugs can significantly damage young broccoli and cabbage plants left unprotected in as few as two to three days.

“This pest is certainly capable of producing the kind of numbers needed to cause this type of damage,” she noted.

The recent identification of the pest in Hays County, however, is not the first instance of the bug being found in South Central Texas, said Wizzie Brown, AgriLife Extension entomologist for Travis County.

“The Bagrada bug has also been identified in the Austin area,” she said. “We’ve had reports of the bug from residents who have home gardens or who tend community gardens. The bugs appear to have shown up sometime late last year and then sprang up again on some cole crops this spring. Some people reporting them thought they were baby stink bugs.”

Bagrada bugs gather on plants and lay their eggs one at a time or in small clusters on the underside of leaves and stems or in soil beneath the plant. The eggs start out white and turn an orange-red as they get older. Young Bagrada bugs change color from bright orange-red to near black with red markings as they get older. Newly molted nymphs are also red but quickly darken to a near-black color with the white and orange markings.

Keck said early detection is important as bug populations can build quickly, but can be difficult because they are small compared to other vegetable pests and may be easily overlooked until populations become large.

“It’s usually difficult to observe Bagrada bugs until there’s been some damage, so look carefully for damage like light green lesions, which are easier to spot than the insects during the early period of infestation,” she said. “If you’re a home gardener, be sure to inspect plants and shipping containers for the bug or signs of possible bug infestation before you plant.”

More frequent monitoring for the bug may be necessary when temperatures rise above 75 degrees, as the bugs are typically more active and visible during the warmer parts of the day.     In gardens where the pest is present in large numbers, Keck said it may be advisable to remove host plants and replace them with plants not in the mustard family.

Keck said while some control methods may include picking the bugs off by hand or using a hand-held vacuum cleaner to remove them from the plants, it is often easier to tap the plant and let the bugs fall onto a cloth in order to collect them. Also, pyramid traps baited with crushed sweet alyssum inside polypropylene bags can be used to catch and destroy these bugs, especially when in large numbers.

In larger production systems, cultural control methods such as weed control and planting transplants as opposed to seeds may reduce populations and damage by Bagrada bugs.

“Stink bugs are difficult to manage with insecticides and repeat applications are often necessary,” Keck said. “Adult bugs usually fly away before they contact the insecticide and return later. Home vegetable growers will probably have better control by using plant covers or screening to exclude the bugs — or by removing host plants from the garden.”

Keck said if insecticides are used in a home garden or landscape, be sure to check the pesticide label to make certain the product is registered for use in that specific application. She noted there has been some success using pyrethrum to suppress adults while azadirachtin and insecticidal soaps have been shown to help reduce nymph populations.

She said experience with the bug on commercial cole crops in conventional field vegetable production in Arizona and California has shown success using carbamate, neonicotinoid, organophosphate or pyrethroid insecticides for control.

However, she noted, most Organic Materials Review Institute-approved pesticides are unable to control Bagrada bug.

For agricultural purposes, pesticides with quick-acting contact activity such as pyrethroids may provide good short-term protection against Bagrada bugs feeding on emerging leaves and transplants, Keck said. Once transplants become established, foliar sprays of pyrethroids and neonicotinoids should help prevent further feeding damage.

“Of course, while these bugs may move to other areas on their own, it is important people don’t help them by inadvertently transporting infested plants or produce into new areas,” she said.

AgriLife Extension community fire ant control program a template for success

May 25, 2017 by Rob Williams

by Paul Schattenberg, Texas A&M AgriLife Communications

Wizzie Brown talking to resident
Elizabeth “Wizzie” Brown (right), entomologist and Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service integrated pest management specialist in Travis County, demonstrates the proper use of a hand-held spreader for a Wood Glen resident during the recent fire ant education day. (Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service photo)

ROUND ROCK – For more than a decade, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service integrated pest management program specialist Wizzie Brown has been engaged in a community-wide battle against one of the state’s most persistent pests – the fire ant.

Since 2005, Brown and residents of the Wood Glen community in Round Rock, north of Austin, have collaborated in a neighborhood fire ant program to control the proliferation of fire ants, eliminate their unsightly mounds and keep them from biting area residents.

“Fire ants roam from yard to yard and have no regard for property lines,” Brown said. “They’re  easily dispersed during their periodic mating flights, and a high percentage of mounds in Texas have multiple queens, which can live for two to five years and produce up to 800 eggs per day.”

Multiple queens also means there is no territorial behavior, resulting in excessive numbers of fire ant mounds per area, with many actually spread over larger areas than can be seen.

“To my knowledge, the Wood Glen effort in Round Rock has been the longest-running community-wide fire ant program in the state and probably in the U.S.,” Brown said. “We recently carried out the fire ant baiting portion of the program and held our annual fire ant education day for the community.”

The Wood Glen neighborhood has 548 homes and covers over 250 acres. It includes a community park, green belt and walking trails.

Fire ant mound in grass
Fire ants and their unsightly mounds are reappearing in many Texas neighborhoods. (Texas A&M AgriLife Extension photo)

“Originally the community came to me,” said Brown, who has been at the AgriLife Extension office in Travis County for the past 15 years. “I got a call from one of the residents who knew our agency was part of the Texas A&M University System and that we provided information and technical assistance on various quality-of-life topics. They wanted to know if we could help them with their fire ant problem, which was pretty extensive.”

Brown said she gave a fire ant control demonstration to the residents on the “two-step” treatment method, which is the agency’s preferred fire ant control method. The first step involves semi-annual broadcast applications of fire ant bait. The second step involves follow-up treatments of individual mounds or “nuisance” ant colonies, such as those in sensitive or high-traffic areas.

“The two-step method is less labor-intensive, less toxic and more environmentally friendly than most other means of do-it-yourself fire ant control,” Brown said.

Brown said similar community-wide fire ant control efforts have also taken place in Bexar and Harris counties in collaboration with the integrated pest management specialists in the AgriLife Extension offices in those two counties.

David Schell, a Wood Glen resident and homeowners association board member, said the treatments in the Round Rock neighborhood have yielded positive results.

“The fire ant program is highly effective at controlling fire ants in both the common areas and homeowners yards,” Schell said. “In the five years I have lived in Wood Glen, I have not seen any fire ant mounds in my yard.”

Brown estimated the overall efficacy of fire ant treatment in the community at more than 99 percent, with “almost zero” sightings of mounds or incidents of children or adults being bitten since treatment began. In addition, a survey Brown conducted on the Wood Glen effort in 2010 documented a 64 percent reduction in pesticide use and $20.73 savings per participating household.

“We only did the front yards with the residents’ permission so they could see what was going on,” Brown said. “They were so pleased with the results they persuaded their homeowners association to put the cost for fire ant control into the budget. Now their homeowner dues pay for two bait treatments per year – one spring and one fall – for the front yards. A few years back, we gave that responsibility over to a pest control company. And each year we also hold a fire ant information day in the community during which we provide information on baits and advice on their proper application for residents who want to treat their backyards.”

Brown said Wood Glen wasn’t the only community in which she and community residents have attempted a long-term fire ant program, but it’s the only one that has lasted.

“We have tried to keep a program going in three of four communities in the Austin area, but they eventually stopped, usually because the community lost the neighborhood ‘champion’ spearheading the effort and the community lost interest,” she said.

Brown said the Wood Glen program’s success has largely been due to active community involvement combined with an engaged homeowners association that has been respectful of residents’ wishes and forthcoming in communications about treatments.

Sam and Leslie Myers, who moved from the Wood Glen neighborhood about four years ago, were involved in fire ant program efforts in the community for about five years.

“There were a lot of stay-at-home moms in the neighborhood and they were tired of their kids getting bit by fire ants both in their yards and the community park area,” said Leslie Myers. “We were the second residents in the neighborhood to take the lead for the program after Wizzie got it started.”

The Myers’ role consisted of coordinating with residents on broadcast baiting timing as well as helping with education day efforts, including providing residents with bait and selling them hand-held spreaders if needed.

“Typically from 100-200 residents came to the community’s fire ant education day,” Sam Myers said.

The Myers also kept the community apprised of their fire ant control efforts through the community newsletter and by giving updates on the program during the annual homeowner association meeting.

“Once the pest control people took over broadcast baiting of the front lawns, they were great to work with and always checked to make sure who had opted out for the treatment,” Leslie Myers said. “And the education day out in the community, where we set up a table and people had to wait in line to get their fire ant bait and spreader, gave residents the opportunity to talk and get to know one another.”

The Myers, who are also Texas Master Gardeners, explained their knowledge of gardening and landscaping was a good tie-in with fire ant control in that it made them aware of beneficial and non-beneficial insects and the need for fewer chemicals in managing their landscape.

In 2011, Brown and her family moved into the Wood Glen neighborhood, where she remains actively involved in the program, providing information and technical assistance, particularly during the neighborhood fire ant education day.

“This is a great family neighborhood and I’m glad I can live here in addition to providing expertise for fire ant control and other aspects of integrated pest management,” she said. “But you don’t need an entomologist living in the neighborhood to have a successful pest management program. All you need is a community champion and people willing to support it.”

Sword Named Innovation Award Recipient

May 16, 2017 by Rob Williams

Dr. Greg Sword in front of a mural holding awards.
Dr. Greg Sword with his plaque and award. Submitted photo

Congratulations to Professor and Charles R. Parencia Chair in Cotton Entomology Dr. Greg Sword for receiving the Texas A&M Technology Commercialization’s Excellence in Innovation Award on May 4, 2017.

The awards were presented during a special luncheon at the Annenberg Presidential Conference Center inside the George Bush Presidential Library. Sword was recognized for his research with fungal endophytes that led to collaboration with an industry partner to produce a commercially available seed treatment for cotton.

The treatment allows cotton plants plagued by dwindling irrigation water and drought to produce more cotton fiber, which helps cotton producers to produce more in times of drought or low water conditions.

“Texas A&M faculty strive for excellence as comprehensive scholars, including excellent teaching, research, discovery and impact,” Texas A&M Provost and Executive Vice President Karan L Watson said. “These awards acknowledge their success in applying new knowledge to the issues of our day, through partnership with industry, commercialization of new ideas and transfer of knowledge to the people of our state, nation and world.”

Sword said the award also brings an awareness to the Department’s as well as the University’s resources and talent.

“I never dreamed that my research would lead to a patent, not to mention receiving an Excellence in Innovation Award,” Sword said. “I am honored, but what this award really highlights is the level of support and resources available here at Texas A&M to enable an idea to go from initial discovery to commercialization in such a short time. I’ve been very fortunate to have worked with lots of talented people all along the way, and their help really made this possible.”

Entomology Students Among 10,000 Aggies Graduating in Spring 2017

May 12, 2017 by Rob Williams

Graduating students before graduation lineup. Photo by Rebecca HapesA large number of students from the Department joined more than 10,000 Aggies that are expected to graduate Friday morning during the May graduation ceremony at Reed Arena.

The students included 23 undergraduates, 4 Masters students, and 4 Ph.D. students, as well as 26 Public Health Entomology Certificate recipients.

Students and families were also treated to a special reception in the Heep Center fourth floor atrium, where they shared memories over cake and snacks. Drs. Pete Teel and David Ragsdale also wished everyone good luck and said a few words of encouragement.

Congratulations and good luck in your futures!!

Undergraduates:

Alexis Zhane Allen Entomology
Javier Cantu Entomology
Denise Carlos Sociology and Entomology minor
Javier Cantu Entomology
Anthony Isamu Cormier University Studies, Biomedical Sciences, minors in Entomology and Japanese
Elaine Wong Chu Entomology
Colton Ryan Cooper Entomology
Erika Lauren Davila Entomology
Gustavo Miguel Flores Entomology
Charley Danyel Gates Entomology
Jalyn Alia Golden Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences and Entomology
Kristina Lorraine Gonzalez Entomology
Grace Victoria Hixson Biomedical Sciences and Entomology
Shelby Kerrin Kilpatrick Entomology and Agricultural Leadership, and Development
Lauren Esther Tapia Krupa Entomology
Tana Luna Animal Science and Entomology
Bradly Adam Mendez Biomedical Sciences and Entomology
Kaitlynn Mauree Ogg Entomology
Elizabeth Kathryn Pokos University Studies, Biomedical Sciences, Entomology and Psychology minor
John Colby Shodrock Entomology
Christine Michelle Serewis-Pond Biomedical Sciences and Entomology
Han Tiffany Le-Ngoc Biomedical Sciences and Entomology
Alex Everett Wright Biomedical Sciences and Entomology

 

Graduates-MS         

Louise ‘Lue’ Cuttiford
Le Zheng
Jason Thomas
Claire McKenna

 

Graduates – Ph.D.        

Kyle Harrison
Elida Espinoza
Ordom Huot
Renato Pires Machado

 

Certificate in Public Health Entomology

Brittany Adewole
Jaime Alegria
Alexis Allen
Jack Beer
Faith Benner
Victoria Blackert
Elaine Chu
Cassie Culver
Andrea Coffey
Bradley Dye
Anna George
Katelyn Goodroe
Jalyn Golden
Kristina Gonzalez
Grace Hixson
Bradly Mendez
Megan Nicholson
Quynn-Nhu Thi Nguyen
Samantha Pena
Christine Serewis-Pond
Meagan Smith
Jessica Stephens
Victoria Van Wart
Heather Villarreal
Mohammed Kahan Vohra
Alex Wright

Department of Entomology Undergraduates Recognized During Special Reception

May 4, 2017 by Rob Williams

Dr. Jeff Tomberlin at the podium
Dr. Jeff Tomberlin speaking words of encouragement to the audience and to undergraduates. Photo by Rob Williams

COLLEGE STATION, Texas–Several of the Department’s undergraduates received recognition and awards at a special recognition reception on the first floor of the Heep Center on Wednesday, May 3.

Students and faculty members were first treated to food outside Room 103 before the main program started and juniors Tammy Starr and Dayvion Adams welcomed everyone to the event.

After the welcome, guest speaker Dr. Jeffery Tomberlin said a few words of encouragement to the graduating seniors during the keynote address.

Adams then reported highlights from the Undergraduate Entomology Student Organization’s activities during the year while Tammy Starr reported highlights from the Aggie Forensic and Investigative Sciences Organization.

Katie Rowe, right, with Dr. Pete Teel.
Katie Rowe, right, with Dr. Pete Teel. Photo by Rob Williams

Dr. Pete Teel then announced several scholarships during the awards presentation portion of the reception.

This year’s scholarship recipients are:

  • Katie Rowe – Burruss McDaniel/Entomology Systematics Scholarship
  • Lindsay Akers – Roger Walker Meola Memorial Scholarship
  • Jeremy Arnold – Fowden G. and Katherine G. Maxwell Scholarship
  • Franchesca Rodriguez – Honorah A. Dore Scholarship
  • Brice Phillips – Paul Truman Riherd Memorial Scholarship
  • Marina Connor – Dr. Manning A. Price Scholarship
  • Emily Parsoneault – Dr. Micky Eubanks Outstanding Faculty Scholarship
  • Mya Gates – Dial and Eva Martin Memorial Scholarship
  • Jacob Underwood – Perry L. Adkisson Scholarship
  • Calli Allison- Len P. Quattrochi Memorial Scholarships

    Marina Connor, right, with Dr. Pete Teel. Photo by Rob Williams
    Marina Connor, right, with Dr. Pete Teel. Photo by Rob Williams

The 2017-2018 cohorts of the Department’s Entomology Scholars Society also announced. The Entomology Scholars Society was developed to help current students to expand their leadership and outreach skills though the enhancement of various departmental events. Members serve as liaisons between faculty, staff, and prospective students and represent the Department by serving as hosts to prospective students, parents, and other campus visitors.

The 2017-2018 Entomology Scholars Society. From left to right: Dayvion Adams, Franchesca Rodriguez, Fatimah Bouderdaben, Mya Gates, Nicholas Richter, and Kejaun Tate..
The 2017-2018 Entomology Scholars Society. From left to right: Dayvion Adams, Franchesca Rodriguez, Fatimah Bouderdaben, Mya Gates,  Nicholas Richter, and Kejaun Tate. Photo by Rob Williams.

The 2017-2018 Scholars are:

  • Dayvion Adams
  • Franchesca Rodriguez
  • Fatimah Bouderdaben
  • Mya Gates
  • Nicholas Richter
  • Kejaun Tate

    Dayvion, left, with Dr. Jim Woolley
    Dr. Jim Woolley, right, with UESO president Dayvion Adams, left. Photo by Rob Williams

Dr. Jim Woolley received the Outstanding Professor of the Year award while Ashleigh Faris received Outstanding Teaching Assistant for Forensics while Chloe Hawkings received the Outstanding Teaching Assistant for Entomology.

The 2017-2018 officers for both AFIS and UESO were announced during the end of the ceremony.

Ashleigh Faris, right, with Tammy Starr, AFISO president, left.
Ashleigh Faris, right, with Tammy Starr, AFISO president, left.

AFIS officers are:

  • Tammy Starr – President
  • Fatimah Bouderdaben – Vice President
  • Adriana Peterson – Treasurer
  • Katie McLeod – Secretary
  • Mya Gates-Historian
  • Skylar Huddleston – Activities Coordinator

    Chloe Hawkings, right, with Dayvion Adams. UESO president, left.
    Chloë Hawkings, right, with Dayvion Adams. UESO president, left.

UESO officers are:

  • Isaac Luna – President
  • Jefferey Barbosa – Vice President
  • Myra Rodgers – Treasurer
  • Katie Rowe-Webmaster/Outreach Coordinator
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