By Jan Suszkiw
Termites Go Hungry on Resistant Trees
Agricultural Research Service scientists in New Orleans, La., have identified 30 types of commercial lumber
that attract or repel Formosan subterranean termites, painting a more complete picture of where this invasive
pest species is likely to turn up in processed wood.
In termite-plagued Louisiana, for example, builders could use the information to select lumber--such as
Western red cedar or Alaskan yellow cedar--that’s less apt to lure the insect into homes. Knowing which types
of hardwood or softwood species Formosan termites prefer could also improve the effectiveness of bait
products that kill the pests by luring them to slow-acting toxins, according to Juan Morales-Ramos and
Guadalupe Rojas, entomologists at ARS’ Southern Regional Research Center in New Orleans.
There, they designed a series of carefully controlled, replicated lab experiments in which termite colonies were
fed wooden blocks cut from 30 types of lumber. Wood that termites didn’t like include old growth bald
cypress; Western red-, Alaskan yellow-, Eastern red-, and Spanish cedar; mahogany; sassafras; and Indian-,
Honduras-, and Bolivian rosewood. In fact, eight of the wood samples actually killed termite colonies during
3-month forced-feeding trials, probably because of noxious chemicals in the wood.
Wood that topped the pest’s favorites in the studies included birch, red gum, Parana pine, sugar maple, pecan
and red oak. Each stimulated more termite feeding than southern yellow pine, a control species the scientists
used, and a commonly used lumber tree in the South.
Southern yellow pine has also been used as bait to help monitor termites foraging for food. This new
information, along with ongoing field studies with living trees, points to other, more attractive woods that should
improve such monitoring to control the pest.
The research is part of an ARS-led national campaign called Operation FullStop to fight the termite, and
minimize its damage. A longer article about their bait and other Operation FullStop tactics is in this month’s
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
Scientific contact: Juan Morales-Ramos and Guadalupe Rojas
Formosan Subterranean Termite Research Unit, ARS Southern Regional Research Center, La.
Phone (504) 286-4256 (Morales-Ramos) jmorales@commserver.srrc.usda.gov
Phone (504) 286-4382 (Rojas); Fax (504) 286-4419 rojas@commserver.srrc.usda.gov
Video and Links to More
Info
ARS
Termite Research Projects
Read:
More on the bait and Operation FullStop in Agricultural Research.
|
|