ARS researchers discovered a new biocontrol technique to reduce one of the biggest pests to wheat growers. Wheat stem sawfly (Cephus cinctus) costs wheat growers an estimated $350 million annually. Due to the limited options for controlling this pest, its range has expanded over the past years, causing devastation to dryland winter wheat crops grown in Colorado and Nebraska. ARS researchers in Fort Collins, CO, and Sidney, MT, along with university colleagues, have developed and tested a simple yet efficient method to control sawflies in affected areas.
Scientists used bales of wheat straw to transport a native predator of sawflies, day-glow orange parasitoids (Bracon spp.), from areas where they were established to devastated wheat-growing regions in Colorado and…..