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    'Kudzu bug' threatens to eat US farmers' lunch

    BLACKVILLE, S.C. (AP) — Kudzu — the "plant that ate the South" — has finally met a pest that's just as voracious. Trouble is, the so-called "kudzu bug" is also fond of another East Asian transplant that we happen to like, and that is big money for American farmers.

    Soybeans.

    "When this insect is feeding on kudzu, it's beneficial," Clemson University entomologist Jeremy Greene says as he stands in a field swarming with the brown, pea-sized critters. "When it's feeding on soybeans, it's a pest."

    Like kudzu, which was introduced to the South from Japan in the late 19th century as a fodder and a way to stem erosion on the region's worn-out farmlands, this insect is native to the Far East. And like the invasive vine, which "Deliverance" author James Dickey famously deemed "a vegetable form of cancer," the kudzu bug is running rampant.

    Megacopta cribraria, as this member of the stinkbug family is known in scientific circles, was first identified near Atlanta in late October 2009. Since then, it has spread to most of Georgia and North Carolina, all of South Carolina, and several counties in Alabama.

    And it shows no signs of stopping.

    Kudzu and soybeans are both legumes. The bug — also known as the bean plataspid — breeds and feeds in the kudzu patches until soybean planting time, then crosses over to continue the moveable feast, says Tracie Jenkins, a plant geneticist at the University of Georgia.

    On a recent sunny day, Greene and doctoral student Nick Seiter visited the 10-acre test field at Clemson's Edisto Research & Education Center in Blackville, about 42 miles east of Augusta, Ga.

    Starting in the middle of the field, Seiter walks down a row, sweeping a canvas net back and forth through the bean plants as he goes. Bugs cling to his pants and shirt, dotting his face like moles.

    "I feel like I'm wearing a bee beard over here," he says. "It tickles."

    At row's end, Seiter pushes his hand up through the net. Bugs cascade over the edge and pool on the sandy soil at his feet.

    The writhing pile makes a fizzing sound like a freshly opened soda.

    "Wow. It's a couple of inches thick," Greene says. "That's just shy of a standard sample that we use to evaluate soybean insects ... and we're looking at a couple of thousand bugs, easy."

    The bugs secrete a caustic substance that smells like a cross between a commercial cleanser and an industrial lubricant. Greene says it's unclear whether this is a defensive device, a way of locating each other in a field, or serves some other purpose.

    Whatever it's for, the secretions are potent enough to etch the bottoms of the plastic tubs he uses to ship samples to colleagues — and to stain the skin on Seiter's blistered right palm a pale orange that can't be washed off.

    "Self tanner," he quips.

    These insects are what entomologists call "true bugs," meaning they have needle-like mouth parts that they use to suck on the plant. So rather than feeding on the pods or leaves, as corn ear worms and common stinkbugs do, kudzu bugs attack the stems and leaf petioles, literally draining the life out of the soybeans.

    "It's reducing the ability of the plant to produce or to send photosynthate ... the food that the plant makes from the sun, to the fruit, to the seed," says Greene. "So we're going to have ... a reduced number of pods per plant, reduced number of seed per pod, and reduced seed size as well — all the above," he says. "It's not showy in terms of the damage that it does to the plant ... but it's going to cause yield loss."

    University of Georgia researchers have recorded losses as high as 23 percent in untreated fields.

    "If you add up all our insect damage put together of different pests on soybeans, it probably would total maybe in an average year maybe a 5 percent yield loss," says North Carolina State University pest specialist Jack Bacheler, who has been warily watching the bug's spread through his state. "And sometimes, with agricultural crops like soybeans, 20 bushels an acre at $10 to $13 could be the difference between profit and loss."

    One thing that concerns Bacheler and others is the bug's hardiness.

    Jenkins says they may be able to respond to temperature and other environmental changes by turning a gene or genes on or off, making them particularly adaptable. They've been found on the windows of Atlanta skyscrapers, from the mountains to the coast.

    "And these are pretty resilient little suckers," she says. "They can get on your car, and you can be going 60, 70, 80 miles an hour down the road, and then you stop, and they're still there. And they're alive. So they can take a pretty good lot of abuse."

    Studies of climate data in the bug's native land are not encouraging.

    "I think it's going to be able to dwell anywhere in the United States that we grow soybeans," says Greene. "So that should be concerning for some of the states that produce millions of acres of soybeans."

    That seems to be where they're headed.

    In 2010, Georgia produced 6.8 million bushels of soybeans, South Carolina 10.5 million and North Carolina more than 40 million, according to the American Soybean Association. Jenkins says there have been unconfirmed sightings in Tennessee, which produced 44 million bushels of soybeans last year.

    From there, it's just a hop, skip and a jump to states like Illinois and Iowa, where production is measured in the hundreds of millions of bushels.

    "They're moving north and west," Jenkins says. "And I think they'll keep going."

    Especially without an effective way to control them, says Bacheler.

    "Its opportunities to spread seem to be unlimited right now," he says.

    Researchers are experimenting with a tiny Asian wasp that lays its eggs inside the kudzu bug eggs. So far, the wasp doesn't seem to have any effect on native insects, Greene says.

    Jenkins is trying to pinpoint the country of origin by studying the DNA of a bacterium, or endosymbiont, that lives in the bug's gut. She is comparing DNA from the U.S. bugs with samples sent to her from India, Japan and China.

    The samples she's analyzed from the various states have all so far been traced back to the same maternal line — meaning this infestation could have begun with a single gravid or egg-bearing female that hitched a ride here on a plant or in someone's luggage.

    Jenkins is hoping a weapon might emerge from her DNA analysis.

    "If there's a gene that's allowing it to adapt really well, if it has the insect gene, then I might be able to pull that out and use it against it," she says.

    For now, farmers are having to rely on chemicals. So far, the results have been mixed, at best.

    Insecticides that work on other stinkbugs have shown promise. But a couple of days after an application, the fields are re-infested.

    "We basically spray, we get kill on what we touch with the spray, and then we get decent activity for a couple of days," says Greene. "And then it's pretty much gone."

    "The problem with this insect is its sheer numbers," says Bacheler. "It's not that this thing can't be controlled. But it's probably going to be costly to do so."

    Greene says the bug is still too new for experts to have come up with the most effective spraying regimen. He hopes data from this season's tests will help solve the problem.

    Farmers like Jack Richardson here in Blackville are counting on it.

    He has been farming for about 30 years and has about 200 acres of soybeans under cultivation. He buys some of his chemicals from a dealer in Georgia, but a year's more experience hasn't imparted any special wisdom.

    "He says, 'If you get too nervous, spray 'em,'" says Richardson, standing waist-deep in a field speckled with bugs. "Well, I've sprayed 'em twice, and it doesn't seem to kill 'em."

    Rumbling across the field in his sprayer, Richardson stares at the bugs clinging to the windshield and sighs.

    "We don't need any new pests," he says. "We've got enough now."

    ___

    Allen G. Breed is a Raleigh, N.C.-based national writer for The Associated Press. He can be reached at features(at)ap

     
    • Edg1  •  7 mths ago
      I hope they don't like Potatos.
      • Ryan H 7 mths ago
        Or potatoes.
      • CeeCee 7 mths ago
        You say potatos, I say potatoes. Somebody said taters.
      • Hair Ball 7 mths ago
        papa's
    • Joe Dirt  •  7 mths ago
      Spray them with Chinese drywall, it'll kill anything......
      • Ibrieal 7 mths ago
        lol that might work...
    • paul  •  7 mths ago
      Psssst! Want to buy some Cane Toads? Aussie
      • John Galt 7 mths ago
        Ya'll should be having more fun shooting those things. little 20ga scattergun should be fun enough.
      • Person. 7 mths ago
        There are billions you idiot.
    • RichardD  •  7 mths ago
      Once again another species brought into the country that has no natural enemy. Why haven't we learned from past experiments ? They brought in Nutria from South America to control the plant growth along the bayous. Then when it was too late they discovered that the Nutria has no natural predator. And that it was burrowing into the levies and causing even more damage. Hybrid Killer bees escaped from some study and now are a menace. Now that we have introduced the problem, we find we can't get rid of it. When will we ever learn Nature has a way of dealing with its own problems. It doesn't need our help.
      • R E D O X 7 mths ago
        don't forget Australian rabbits and cane toads !
      • lilly 7 mths ago
        Ever go to a garden store. can bet you 90% of those plant are not native.
      • PTCGAZ 7 mths ago
        Lilly depends no the region. Here in teh desert most of the plants you can buy at the local (non-big box store ) nurseries are local plants. However, big box stores will sell you anything to make a profit.
    • Brian  •  7 mths ago
      Why does man always try to mess with mother nature...what always seems like a good idea always comes back to bite us in the #$%$
      • Mr. Ed Narrens 7 mths ago
        If you like this just wait till you see what all the GMO crops are doing...
      • marcus 7 mths ago
        I think he meant to use a three letter bad word
      • David 7 mths ago
        If the farming industry hadn't "messed with mother nature," you'd probably be starving to death!
    • TNH  •  7 mths ago
      Stop soybean production for a couple of years so the bugs can finish off the kudzu!
    • dedmandan  •  7 mths ago
      meanwhile not one here in central florida where we are being overrun with kudzu bag em tag em send me some no soybeans around here
    • tony m  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  7 mths ago
      As long as they leave the marijuana plants in the backof the field alone, We can survive
    • Junior  •  7 mths ago
      those bugs are all over our property. I had been wondering what they are.. finally a story on yahoo that i learned from..
    • willard  •  7 mths ago
      these stinky little bugs have infested the 17th story of the bldg in which i live in Atlanta. . .i have killed thousands of these bugs in the last six months with no INSECTICIDE. . .a combination of biodegradable laundry detergent and water. . kills em dead after about 60 to 90 secs.
    • Kontra  •  7 mths ago
      This is unfortunate to the U.S. overall. No matter what, there needs to be a pesticide made to control this pest. Most people to not know how much a farmer has invested in his business. Usually every dime he has made is invested in property, machinery, and other items to go along with a 16-18 hour work day. This type of pest if it continues to spread will devistate the soy crop and the farmer.
    • Frank  •  7 mths ago
      Lot of posters seem to think this bug was introduced purposely. I guess actually reading the actual article was too much for them. The guessing (as reported) is that this was yet another hitchiker. Sorta like the zebra mussels that snuck in (probably) in ship's bilgewater. Face it, folks, when you move stuff, or yourself, around the world, assorted biota travel along. It means we need to continually find new ways to cope. Kinda like dealing with life, generally.
    • zerosevendeuce  •  7 mths ago
      I wonder if they could be turned into fuel
    • WATCHEM  •  7 mths ago
      Me thinks free trade has some drawbacks with hitchhikers from around the world. There are not enough, and can never be enough, inspections to halt this.
    • M  •  7 mths ago
      History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men
    • Keeya  •  7 mths ago
      They are eating more than soybeans and kudzu. They are eating my roses and my halloween decor and thats cloth. So whats really going on.
    • paradox_62  •  7 mths ago
      Boy, do we have a flat learning curve. What part of "don't f with Mother Nature" are we too stupid to understand? Every time we screw around with this stuff, it's the rabbits in Australia all over again.
    • Janet  •  7 mths ago
      When are we going to learn not to bring in insects and bugs from other countries?
    • Vandy Fan  •  7 mths ago
      Something "Made in China" that is well made, works efficiently and doesn't contain lead paint or toxic chemicals!
    • Emma LeeR  •  7 mths ago
      Its always something, this year in the midwest my tomatoes were invaded by brown stink bugs (new to this area) that ruined most of the fruit, so far no insecticide has been shown to stop the critters
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