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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, November 26, 2008

ATTACKING INVASIVE PEST
It's wasp versus wasp to save native wiliwili

By Rod Ohira
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

At Queen Lili'uokalani Botanical Garden, entomologist Juliana Yalemar released a biological control insect to attack the erythrina gall wasp, which has been devastating Hawai'i's native wiliwili trees.

JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The tiny erythrina gall wasp has been a big threat, devastating wiliwili and coral trees across the state since 2005.

Hawai‘i Department of Agriculture

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

State Department of Agriculture exploratory entomologist Mohsen Ramadan found a predator for the gall wasp in Tanzania. About 500 of his find, Eurytoma erythinae, were released yesterday.

Advertiser library photo

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As tiny insects released by the state were laying eggs on a nearby tree, the man who brought them here two years ago to prey on wasps threatening to wipe out Hawai'i's native wiliwili tree population was somewhere in Africa searching for answers to more local agricultural programs.

State Department of Agriculture exploratory entomologist Mohsen Ramadan was absent, but the product of his work — 500 tiny wasps called Eurytoma erythinae — were released yesterday in a stand of native wiliwili trees at Lili'uokalani Botanical Garden in Liliha.

The insects, one-quarter size of a mosquito, are natural enemies of the erythrina gall wasp, which has been devastating wiliwili and coral trees statewide since 2005 and has been a worldwide problem for only one year longer.

Ramadan, a native of Egypt who has been working for the Agriculture Department since 1997, went to Tanzania in 2005 and 2007 to find a natural enemy for the gall wasp because the country had more than 15 species of erythrina, which include native wiliwili and other introduced local species such as coral trees and the tall erythrina that are widely used as windbreaks.

He found a predator that feeds externally on gall wasp larvae and pupae and brought it back to Honolulu in 2006. At the time, Ramadan told The Advertiser, "I'm very excited about this parasitoid because it attacks 95 percent of the gall wasps in Tanzania."

A team from the University of Hawai'i College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources also traveled to Africa to aid in the search.

Ramadan is in Africa searching for two more predator wasps and also for control solutions to invasive weeds such as fireweed, fountain grass and ivy gourd, said Janelle Saneishi of the Department of Agriculture

Permits to release the biocontrol insects were obtained from the state Department of Agriculture in 2007, and the permit from the U.S. Department of Agriculture about a week ago.

The state yesterday released Eurytoma erythinae as a biological control agent in the first of 12 planned releases statewide. Fifteen minutes after the release, Plant Pest Control Branch officials observed the predator laying eggs on the leaves of the wiliwili, where gall wasps lay larvae.

The gall wasp larvae cause severe galling, or deformities, which will result in the leaves dropping off. Without its leaves, the wiliwili is not able to derive much energy and will eventually decline in health and die, officials said.

"The release of this natural predator of the erythrina gall wasp is the only lifeline for our native wiliwili trees," said Sandra Lee Kunimoto, chairwoman of the Hawai'i Board of Agriculture. "Finding this biological control agent and making sure that it will not cause harm to other plants or beneficial insects in Hawai'i has been a priority for our staff since the discovery of the gall wasp here in 2005."

Biological control is the only way to save the wiliwili in remote and forested areas, said Neil Reimer, manager of the Plant Pest Control Branch.

"This is actually the perfect time to release this biocontrol because the young leaves are just emerging and as the gall wasp population increases, so will the predatory wasps," Reimer said.

Reach Rod Ohira at rohira@honoluluadvertiser.com.