Reuter site - Termites' powerful weapon against extermination?
Their own poop
Termites' powerful weapon against extermination? Their own poop
ORLANDO (Reuters) - Scientists trying to understand why destructive wood-eating
termites are so resistant to efforts to exterminate them have come up with an
unusually repugnant explanation.
Termites' practice of building nests out of their own feces creates a
scatological force field that Florida scientists now believe is the reason
biological controls have failed to stop their pestilential march all over the
world.
A nine-year study concluded that termite feces act as a natural antibiotic, growing
good bacteria in the subterranean nests that attack otherwise deadly pathogens,
according to the findings published this month in the Proceedings of the Royal
Society B.
"When they make a poop, it's not like they can throw it away and say
forget about this. And over the millions of years of evolution it somehow
evolved to take advantage of the poop there," said Nan-Yao Su, a
University of Florida entomology professor and lead scientist and co-author of
the study, along with Thomas Chouvenc, a University of Florida research
associate.
Su also is the inventor of the popular Sentricon termite baiting and control
system, which in 1995 became the first major alternative to liquid chemical
treatments.
The findings could put an end to 50 years of failed research attempts to find a
species of fungi that could kill termites when introduced into nests. Research
repeatedly showed that fungi killed termites in a petri dish but not in the
wild, Su said.
"Nobody was able to make it work in the field, but nobody would admit
it," he said.
Su's goal was to find out why biological control never worked. His research
colleagues determined that Streptomyces bacteria that are found in the nests
and feed on fecal matter may be producing beneficial antimicrobial compounds that
protect the termites from other potentially toxic matter.
Termites, mostly the voracious Formosans, cause $40 billion worth of damage a
year worldwide, eating through wood structures particularly in Japan, China and
the United States, Su said.
By the time a house is infested, the underground termite nest typically is 300
feet in diameter, hosting several million termites with a biomass weight of
approximately 30 pounds, the weight of a medium-sized dog.
In one example, termites took nine months to bring down a new house in Hawaii
built in the 1970s inadvertently on top of an untreated termite colony, Su
said.
Further research will attempt to discover a way to bypass the protective
compounds to destroy the termites, and to determine whether the findings can
lead to new antibiotics for humans to replace those which have become
ineffective.
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