Clover root weevil
in the South Island of NZ

Home Identification Distribution Report CRW Control Media Links

Control of clover root weevil

Clover root weevil (CRW) is difficult to control in pasture partly because the larvae live in the soil which makes them difficult to kill with insecticides. Also, the adults are very mobile and can fly, so treated pastures can be rapidly reinvaded from surrounding untreated areas. However, the establishment of clover seedlings in areas infested by clover root weevil could be assisted by the application of a systemic insecticide at sowing.

The use of biological control agents in tandem with careful management of clover will play an important role in reducing the impacts of CRW.

A parasitoid wasp for biological control

Microctonus aethiopoides parasitoid (click for full sized image)
Microctonus aethiopoides

In January 2006, AgResearch released a biological control agent in Waikato, Hawke's Bay and Manawatu, and there have been very promising early indications that it will rapidly become established there.

The agent was subsequently released in the South Island at Richmond in July 2006, with funding from Dairy Insight and Meat & Wool New Zealand, and logistical support from Nelson Federated Farmers, the NZ Landcare Trust, and local farmers.

The biological control agent is a tiny parasitoid wasp called Microctonus aethiopoides which AgResearch collected and imported from Europe. The Environmental Risk Management Authority of New Zealand accepted the results of AgResearch's testing which showed this biological control agent would be environmentally safe and gave permission for it to be released in late 2005. The CRW parasitoid is a different strain of the same species which was imported to control lucerne weevil (Sitona discoidues) in 1982.

The lifecycles of CRW and the parasitoid are described in detail in an information sheet produced by AgResearch.

Beauveria for biological control

Beauveria is a fungal pathogen which is specific to insects, and is safe for plants, livestock and humans. It infects and kills weevil larvae and pupae in the soil, and adults can also pick up the disease as they emerge from pupae and move out of the soil. AgResearch is testing the fungus as a biological insecticide, applying a granular formulation to the soil with a seed drill to try to protect clover roots from feeding damage. AgResearch is currently evaluating if Beauveria needs to be re-applied every year, or if will it establish in the soil to provide long-term suppression.

Clover management

More tips for managing clover in the presence of clover root weevil can be found in the pamphlets produced by Waikato Clover Management Group, Meat and Wool New Zealand, and Homelea Ltd.

There is a MAF Sustainable Farming Fund project currently researching the on-farm management of the economic and environmental impacts of clover root weevil.