honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, March 27, 2009

Moratorium urged for biocontrols

By Bret Yager
Hawaii Tribune-Herald

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Dwight Takamine

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Mark Nakashima

spacer spacer

Big Island lawmakers have introduced resolutions calling for a ban on biological control agents such as the Brazilian scale insect that would attack strawberry guava.

State Sen. Dwight Taka-mine, D-1st (Hamakua, N. Hilo), and Rep. Mark Naka-shima, D-1st (Kohala, Hama-kua, N. Hilo), introduced the Senate and House versions of the resolution March 18, calling on the state Department of Agriculture and the Department of Land and Natural Resources to implement a five-year moratorium on release of biocontrol agents targeting plants that serve as food sources — including strawberry guava, avocado, mango, passion fruit and other plants that some gather wild as a source of food.

"The concern in the community is that we seem to be rushing ahead on this issue," Nakashima said. "The matter has not been studied, and the concern about the scale insect jumping to other species has not been adequately addressed."

The Big Island County Council postponed a vote last fall on a similar resolution, this one asking state and federal agriculture departments not to release the Brazilian scale insect Tectococcus ovatus. The county is still waiting for a reworked draft environmental assessment of the Forest Service plan to release the insect. Public meetings will be held before the county votes on the resolution.

A draft assessment finished last March proposed the release of the scale insect by the Forest Service Institute of Pacific Islands Forest-ry. M. Tracy Johnson, a Forest Service research entomologist, has been reworking the draft since then.

He said he expects to have another draft ready for public meetings and input by late May.

Johnson originally expected to have revisions ready late last summer but had trouble finding a contractor to help with the assessment.

"It's really important for people to understand the insect is not going to kill off strawberry guava," Johnson said. "It just doesn't have that level of impact. We do expect it to slow down the spread of strawberry guava into native forests."

The proposal to release the biocontrol insect ignited a storm of debate last year. Some use strawberry guava for food and as wood, and fear the insect will attack other plants. Scientists and others say the guava is invasive and is wiping out native forests.

"With regard to food security, my view is that the guava is actually a critical threat," Johnson said. "It's host to fruit flies, so we have huge numbers of flies coming out and invading agriculture, and hindering our ability to develop truly diversified ag."