|
GLACIAL GRASS HOPPERS YIELD CLUES
By Sean
Henahan, Access Excellence
LARAMIE, Wyo.(4/22/96)-
A rare find of grasshoppers frozen
for 800 years in Rocky Mountain glaciers may yield new clues to
help combat modern-day versions of this pesky pest that ravages
food and forage crops.
"We especially want to find out why one species--the Rocky
Mountain Locust--mysteriously began to disappear in the late
1800s and became extinct in the early 1900s," said Richard
Nunamaker, a U.S. Department of Agriculture scientist in Laramie,
Wyo. He says these grasshoppers had once numbered in the
billions.
USDA researchers are using DNA techniques to analyze the
grasshopper's genetics in the hope that it may give them a way to
understand how this species relates to today's grasshoppers. The
analysis may reveal a flaw in the extinct grasshopper, perhaps a
genetic trait that decreased its ability to survive, that could
become a weapon against present day species, says Nunamaker.
Nunamaker did the grasshooper collecting while on summer vacation
at the Knife Point Glacier in Wyoming's Shoshone National Forest.
He also collected frozen butterflies, moths, bees, ants, crickets
and dragonflies, while on a research team headed by Jeffrey
Lockwood of the University of Wyoming. Lockwood studied four
glaciers in Montana.
It is likely the grasshoppers and other insects probably became
trapped in snow and ice while migrating over mountain ranges in
search of food. As much as 90 percent of some glaciers has
melted in the past 85 years, exposing the insect life.
"The Rocky Mountain Locust specimens we collected were far better
preserved than any previously obtained from glaciers," Nunamaker
said. "At times,we and some hungry birds were in a race to pick
up specimens. We had to quickly gather them. Birds found the
locusts a delicacy and pulled them out as soon as ice melted.
And if we and the birds weren't fast enough, melting water
quickly washed them away."
Related information on the Internet
USDA
Research
|
|