Researchers at
The “evil weevil,” as it’s been dubbed by IFAS entomologists, has destroyed
“To finally get it out there in the wild and see what it can do and if it can really help solve a problem, that’s what we’ve all been shooting for,” said
Cave discovered the insect in the mountain forests of
This is the first release of an organism reared at UF’s Biological Control Research and Containment Laboratory in
The flies were released at the end of June, and traps were put out mid-August to check on their progress. The results will show whether the second generation of flies can find and parasitize the weevils.
The weevil, native to
{sidebar id=2}
For more:
Latest from Nursery Management
- John Ruter named National Academy of Inventors Fellow
- University of Florida study unlocks secrets of invasive short-spined thrips
- IPPS announces organizational rebrand, new website and 2026 international membership drive
- Growscape appoints chief manufacturing officer, Brian Cunningham
- BioWorks introduces Sandrine Copper Soap and Cintro Insecticidal Soap
- Experts help Florida cemetery become state’s first to earn arboretum accreditation
- BioWorks appoints Jason Miller as director of sales and distributor relations manager
- Light a spark