Bees and other pollinator
insects are critical for the production of 15%-30% of the
crops on which we
depend. Honey bees also supply us with delicious honey. There is yet another
service that we may soon be getting through the agency of this hard-working
category of insects. There is a start-up company in Ontario, Canada called BVT (Bee Vectoring Technology), which is enlisting bees in the control of crop pests. This idea has
been explored for some time, but BVT is hammering out the practical and
regulatory steps needed to make it a commercial reality working with both
honeybees and bumble bees. I’ll explain the logic behind
this approach below.
Because bees selectively
and efficiently visit the flowers on a crop, they are ideal candidates to
deliver biological agents or chemicals to manage several important plant
diseases whose infective strategy involves flowers. One example would be Fire blight of apples and pears, caused by a
bacterium that only infects through flowers (Erwinia amylovora). An
antibiotic or biological control agent delivered by bees would be an elegant
solution. There is also a group fungal pathogens which colonize the petals and
other portions of the flowers after they decline (various species of Botrytis,
Sclerotinia and Monilinia).These fungi use the energy-base of
the dead flower parts in order to grow their way into the green, growing
portions of the plant. They cause serious diseases of sunflowers, Canola, almonds, strawberries, and stone fruits. Once again, bees can be a
targeted agent to get fungicides or biocontrol agents in place on the flowers
to then deny that foothold to the pathogens.
When bee-delivered, control
can be more effective than general, foliar sprays because they can arrive at
each flower as it opens, something that happens over a period of time. Bee-delivered
products use ~95% less material because they are not being applied to anything
in the orchard or field other than the flowers. Obviously the pest control
agents have to be safe for the bees themselves and pass all the other
regulatory screens for human and environmental safety, but there are many
promising options that can meet those hurdles. There may even be agents that
the bees can move back into their hives to control some of their own pests.
BVT’s work is based on 20
years of research initiated at the University of Guelph by entomologist John Sutton, plant
pathologist Peter Kevan and agronomist Todd Mason. They have developed a tray
of powder placed at the hive door so that the bees pick up some material to
spread to flowers. Field trials conducted with Les Shipp of Agriculture Canada have been very encouraging and BVT,
is working with bee specialists like Sydney Cameron of the University of Illinois to insure bee safety. The CEO,
Michael Collinson, is confident that BVT will be able to make a major
contribution to Integrated
Pest Management systems and to do so in a way which is good for both farmers and bees.
Forbes
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