Abstract

Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes (Mart.) Solms.)creates severe problems in the irrigationdistricts of Mexico, particularly in westernSinaloa. Therefore water hyacinth weevils(Neochetina eichhorniae Warner and N. bruchi Hustache), imported from the USA in1993, were used to initiate a biologicalcontrol program. Precautionary screeningrevealed that some were infected with amicrosporidian so disease-free colonies wereproduced by eliminating infected breedinglines. To demonstrate effectiveness prior toopen field releases, weevils were firstreleased in cages at field sites. Weevilintensity increased to 6.3 weevils/plant after320 days when the plants were all dead ordying. More than 8,600 N. bruchi and14,500 N. eichhorniae were then releasedat various sites during January 1995 to August1996. Waterhyacinth coverage declined atBatamote reservoir (134 ha) from 95% to <3%by 1997; at the 12-ha Hilda reservoir from100% in May 1995 to 1% by March 1998; at the42.3-ha Arroyo Prieto reservoir from 100% to1% during the same interval; and at theMariquita reservoir (492 ha), the largestreservoir in the Humaya system, from 394 ha(80%)to 98.4 ha (20%).

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