Transcript Slide 1

Approaches to managing invasive agricultural
and forestry pests in Northern Ireland
Archie K. Murchie, Sam Clawson & Stephen Jess
Invasive pests threaten both agriculture and the
environment (biodiversity)
Take two beetles
Colorado potato beetle
Leptinotarsa decemlineata
Pest of potatoes
Harlequin ladybird
Harmonia axyridis
Aphidophagous predator
Outcompetes native species
Agriculture
Biodiversity
Colorado potato beetle
Destructive Insect Act 1877
Numerous interceptions
and outbreaks
Established in England in
1976 but eradicated
Ireland & UK have Protected Zone
status (EC Plant Health Directive)
Belfast May 2005
Colorado potato beetle (c. 80) intercepted in
parsley from Italy
Parsley is not a host plant
99 boxes of parsley destroyed
Dispersal of parsley traced
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f8/Potato_beetle_diffusion.jpg
Native range
Current
distribution
Origin of
the potato
Harlequin ladybird
Native to eastern Asia
Introduced as biocontrol agent in the
US and Europe
Legislation prohibits deliberate
introduction but eradication?
The Wildlife (Northern Ireland) Order 1985
(under review)
Proposal M “…provide a discretionary general
power for the Department to take action to control,
contain or eradicate invasive non-native species
and provide associated powers of entry…”
Brown et al. 2008 BioControl 53:5–21
Lisburn November 2007
Single female Harlequin ladybird
Sweet celery
Murchie et al. 2008 Ir. Nat. J. 29: 25-26
www.habitas.org.uk/ladybirds
Photo © S. Hopkin Antenna Jul 2005
In the case of many invasive terrestrial invertebrates: Environmental
protection legislation overlaps with agricultural legislation
Regional Plant Protection
Organisations
RPPOs
(Scientific guidance
e.g. Pest Risk Analyses) (e.g.EPPO)
EC Plant Health Directive
Int. Plant
Protection
Convention
World Trade
Organisation
Sanitary and
Phytosanitary
Measures
Agreement
CBD
Convention on
Biological
Diversity (1992)
article 8 (h)
EC Plant Health Directive (2000/29/EC) provides legislative framework for
Plant Health in the European Community
Enacted in NI by The Plant Health Order (Northern Ireland) 2006
(www.opsi.gov.uk/sr/sr2006/20060082.htm#33)
The Plant Health (Wood and Bark) Order (Northern Ireland) 2006
The Bee Diseases and Pests Control Order (Northern Ireland) 2007
•List of pests and diseases & plant material
•“…any plant pest not normally present in Northern Ireland and in
respect of which there is, in the opinion of the inspector, an imminent danger
of its spreading or being spread in Northern Ireland.”
DARD structure re Plant Health
Farm Policy
Branch
Legislation,
coordination
Quality Assurance
Branch
Inspection,
enforcement
Horticulture team
e.g.
Crops team
Plant health Inspections at the airports
and seaports
Checks on plant passporting
Detention and destruction of affected
material
Forest Service
Inspection,
enforcement
Agri-Food &
Biosciences Inst.
Identification,
e.g. scientific guidance
Entomology
Plant pathology
Nematology
Molecular biology
Identification of suspect organisms by
morphological or molecular means
Biological information, e.g. overwintering
survival, ability to spread…etc
Surveys for specific pests and diseases
Guidance on monitoring and control
Routine inspections of producers’ facilities
Pest risk analyses
Provision of phytosanitary certificates for
exports
Horizon scanning incl. invasive alien
species & climate change implications
www.dardni.gov.uk/publications-farming-and-food-plant-health-contingency-plan-2009
Belfast February 2004
9,000 cubic metres of wood bark from Estonia
Accompanied by a Phytosanitary Certificate
Apparently, had been fumigated with methyl bromide
Routine examination for
quarantine pests
Living invertebrates were found (larval Diptera, mites and
rhabditid nematodes)
Galleries typical of Ips typographus were seen in some bark
pieces
Detention order served, ship reloaded and fumigated
Cost > £150, 000
From incubated bark samples, two live
Ips typographus emerged
‘The New Zealand flatworm’
Arthurdendyus triangulatus
(Dendy) (Tricladida: Terricola)
Reduction in
soil fertility
Decline in
earthwormfeeding
wildlife
Adult anecic earthworms per m2
An invasive alien species, an agricultural pest and a threat to biodiversity?
5
4
3
2
1
0
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
Flatworms per m2
(Diagram from Fraser, Boag
(1998) Pedobiologia 42: 542-553)
Considerable debate (Norway, Denmark, Iceland & Sweden)
led to the concept of an indirect plant pest
EPPO guidelines on flatworm published
http://archives.eppo.org/EPPOStandards/PM1_GENERAL/pm1-03-e.doc
www.eppo.org/QUARANTINE/Pest_Risk_Analysis/extracts/05-12035%20artioposthia%20triangulata.doc
IPPC Secretariat, 2005. Proceedings of the workshop on invasive alien species and the International Plant Protection Convention, 2003. Rome, Italy: FAO
Trade & cost/benefit analyses
WTO - Sanitary and Phytosanitary measures must not constitute a disguised
restriction to international trade
Managed or acceptable risk, rather than zero risk
c.f. ‘precautionary principle’
Earthworms increase grass yield ~ 25% (NZ Stockdill, 1982)
Flatworms reduce earthworm biomass by 14% (experimental plots)
Reduction in yield of 3.5%
Fertilisers and lime = £83.9 M*
Economic impact £2.9 M per annum
*www.dardni.gov.uk/stats-review-2008-final.pdf
The New Zealand flatworm has been in Ireland and Scotland for
over 45 years
Quarantine
priority stage
Invader
abundance
Invasion
Eradication priority stage
Carrying capacity
Control
priority
stage
Adaptation by prey
New predators
Effective control
unlikely without
massive
resource input
Time
Conclusions
Scope for using Plant Health mechanisms for invasive terrestrial
invertebrates, e.g. the Harlequin ladybird
Plants, aquatic species, vertebrates pose different problems
Coordination “The Plant Health Services’ response to this organism was
based on the fact that ‘no one else would take it’.” Oct 2000
(https://statistics.defra.gov.uk/esg/evaluation/planth/chapter6.pdf)
Acknowledgements
Wilf Weatherup, DARD Quality Assurance Branch
Alan Bell, AFBI
Paul Moore, AFBI
Pathways
Initial pathway was probably: containerised plants (e.g. roses) or daffodil
bulbs or potatoes (Faroe Islands)
Equipment for hunting monsters?
An American freshwater flatworm (Phagocata woodworthi)
was thought to have been introduced into Loch Ness on
monster hunting equipment
Reynoldson, Smith & Maitland (1981). A species of North American triclad (Paludicola;
Turbellaria) new to Britain found in Loch Ness, Scotland. Journal of Zoology, 193 : 531 - 539.