Chemical brighteners take shine from diamondback moth

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Published: December 12, 2002

Scientists from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural

Research Service are looking into how brighteners similar to those

found in laundry detergent can help fight diamondback moths.

The moth is a worldwide pest of cruciferous crops such as canola,

cabbage, turnip and broccoli.

Scientists are using naturally occurring viruses as a new approach to

help control these pests. But the viruses act slowly, and the moth

caterpillar can inflict a lot of damage before it dies.

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Fluorescent brighteners, when used with moth-infecting viruses, can

enhance the virus’s potency. They are chemicals that take in

ultraviolet light and re-emit the energy as visible light. They are

commonly used in laundry detergents to make clothes seem brighter.

Research entomologists Martin Shapiro and Robert Farrar of the ARS’

Insect Biocontrol Laboratory in Beltsville, Maryland, have been testing

a newly discovered diamondback moth virus.

They found the addition of certain fluorescent brighteners can make the

virus more effective against the insect.

The viruses are promising alternatives to pesticides for many important

pests, especially caterpillars. While some viruses have been known to

infect the diamondback moth, none is particularly potent against it.

In lab tests, the fluorescent brightener made the virus four times more

effective against the moth caterpillars.

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