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Free, for a limited time only: Beetle farms

While Worcester desperately tries to eradicate one beetle species, a group in eastern Massachusetts is looking for volunteers to help raise another species.

The Neponset River Watershed Association is looking for volunteers to help nurture Galerucella beetles, which eat purple loosestrife, to help control the pretty-yet-destructive invasive weed now choking off marshes across the state:

... Volunteers will care for the Purple loosestrife plants at home. Each volunteer will care for a multiple of 10 to 12 plants; this number of potted plants fits into one kiddie pool, which is used to keep the soil moist. Volunteers decide how many kiddie pools they prefer to manage. At first, plant care will consist of placing the kiddie pool in a sunny spot and keeping the water at a regular level inside the pool. After about a month, when the plants have grown to about a foot and a half in height, volunteers will cover them with nets. At this point, we'll provide volunteers with 10 beetles to apply to each of their plants. For about a month more, volunteers will continue to maintain the water levels in the kiddie pool and keep an eye on their beetles and their offspring. ...

In July, you'll bring your pots out to a designated spot along the river, release the netting and let those beetles and their larvae move out and eat wild loosestrife.


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Comments

I wouldnt know the specifics on this, but isnt there a chance that this could cause this plant to spread if a volunteer were not as careful as they should be?

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I've come back to warn you that we have no loosestrife, but we're completely overrun by beetles!!

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I imagine that's why they're having you grow the plants in a kiddie pool. It looks like loosestrife grows from seed and from root stock (say if you try to rip it up but leave some parts behind). It flowers all summer but I don't know when it sets seed.

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Well, two years, but still, they're right in Cambridge. The Friends of Fresh Pond Reservation has held several workshops on their beetle program, and recruited plenty of volunteers to help grow them.. See http://www.friendsoffreshpond.org/loosestrifebioco...

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I do hope they know what they are doing.

I wonder if we could cross-breed Gypsy Moths with Beetles to eat the loostrife and/or the other beetles?

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I'm definitely gonna do it.

Like democracy, biocontrol isn't perfect, just better than most everything else that's been tried. That beetle's got a good track record.

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