Beetle attacks Wandering Jew

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
L | A

It may be a handsome beetle, but what's more attractive is the way it eats – it's the Tradescantia Leaf Beetle, one of the latest biological control agents to be released in the Bay of Plenty.

This is the second release of the beetle in the region with the first carried out at a site south of Tauranga last month.

The Tradescantia Leaf Beetle is being released in the wild.

Bay of Plenty Regional Council biosecurity officer Tim Senior says the adult beetles were released in the Opotiki area in the Eastern Bay of Plenty this week to help control the problematic pest plant Tradescantia fluminensis.

This weed is more commonly known as Wandering Jew.

'This is an aggressive pest plant that forms extensive, sometimes deep carpets, which can obliterate all native ground covering,” says Tim.

'It's also commonly hated by gardeners and it's almost impossible to get rid of.”

Tim says it was the leaf beetles' larvae, which did most of the damage to it.

'Although the adult beetle chews holes around the edges of the leaf, the main damage is caused by the larvae, which graze the tissue off the leaves, mostly on the undersides, and can eventually skeletonise them.”

The beetle is host-specific and it is unlikely that anything other than this pest plant will be attacked.

Other agents that feed on the stems and growing tips are also being considered for introduction to work alongside this beetle.

Tim says the release of these insects is not a quick-fix as it requires some time for them to establish and impact on the pest plant population.

The Environmental Risk Management Authority has approved the release as a biological control agent in New Zealand after rigorous testing.

Sites where the beetle has been released will be monitored and when sufficient numbers are established, the beetle will be redistributed to other parts of the Bay of Plenty.
 
Some pansies like to call the plant 'wandering dude' because they can't handle using the Cool Name. I never really saw it as an offensive name, personally.

Unfortunately, they don't have better things to get upset about.
 
Tim says it was the leaf beetles' larvae, which did most of the damage to it.

'Although the adult beetle chews holes around the edges of the leaf, the main damage is caused by the larvae, which graze the tissue off the leaves, mostly on the undersides, and can eventually skeletonise them.”
Were they six million leaves?
 
I thought this was a tongue in cheek reference to some jewish perambulator being struck by a small german automobile.

I'm a bit disappointed now.
 
Last edited:
Some pansies like to call the plant 'wandering dude' because they can't handle using the Cool Name. I never really saw it as an offensive name, personally.

Unfortunately, they don't have better things to get upset about.
Call it the Walkin' Dude.
1721489976607.png
Nobody will nail Flagg better than Jamey Sheridan. Just like Tim Curry's Pennywise.
 
I hate when they do this shit. They released these fucking beetles in Virginia a few years ago and now they're a huge fucking nuisance- Way more obnoxious than the creeper vine they were meant to eliminate.

They swarm in huge groups, bump their dumbass fat fuck bodies against any and every surface, and are loud as fuck. I can't even smoke outside in the mornings without getting mobbed by these fuckers and I wish them all a slow fiery death.
 
it's a beautiful plant, when it's potted. it's leaves have a lovely iridescence.
1721526948934.png

but if it's planted in the ground, it completely overwhelms everything around it.
1721527055159.png

(yes, yes, insert your hilarious commentary on jews here ... we know, you're so very, very clever.)
 
Back
Top Bottom