Scientists in China are seeking to deploy an army of predatory stink bugs to battle a fall armyworm incursion that threatens to devastate the country’s grain crops.
The Institute of Plant Protection has set up a “factory” that can breed 10 million stink bugs a year to sustainably manage the pest without heavy reliance on pesticides.
The stink bug is widely distributed in China and is usually found on elm and poplar trees, and in cotton and soybean fields, the institute’s researchers said in a 2012 paper.
The insect preys on a large variety of species, including cotton boll-worm, and can effectively suppress agricultural and forest pests in the orders Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera and Hemiptera, scientists said in an April 2013 paper.