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The agency does not know what happened to most of the biocontrol agents it approved for use, Flanders said, because it does not have congressional authority to require monitoring after insects are released or to collect such data. However, he noted that the potential effects are assessed prior to every release, with input from federal environmental agencies. "When you approve a permit, it is an irretrievable event," Flanders said. "The signing of a permit ... is not received lightly by the people who do it." But in Hawaii, where invasive species have long been a concern, the standard is more stringent. The state requires monitoring for effects on non-targeted plants and insects, said Neil Reimer, Hawaii's plant pest control chief. When biocontrol agents approved by federal authorities have gone awry, the effects have not been discovered for years. Researchers recently found that a chain reaction followed the release of gall flies in Montana in the 1970s to combat spotted knapweed, which takes over grasslands. The fly larvae became food for deer mice that proliferated and ate the seeds of the very native plants the fly was supposed to protect, said Dean Pearson, a research ecologist at the U.S. Forest Service's Rocky Mountain Research Station. The deer mice also were carrying hantavirus -- a disease that can be deadly in humans. A Montana health department spokesman said it is unknown whether any of the 23 hantavirus illnesses and six deaths since 1993 were associated with the gall fly release. APHIS spokesman David Sacks said the agency would continue to issue permits for the gall fly until it sees additional evidence of the problem. Introduced insects can also travel great distances and start eating what they should not, said Svata Louda, a professor of biology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. "There are very few exotic species introductions you can name that have long-term positive effects," she said. Louda found that a weevil introduced from Europe in 1969 to combat musk thistle had moved by the 1990s nearly 30 miles from the nearest musk thistle population to the Nebraska Sandhills. It began feeding on a native thistle that Louda says could now go extinct. Given the difficulty in predicting future impacts of biocontrols, critics say they should be used more sparingly. "In biocontrol today, we sort of take a shotgun approach," Pearson said. "We need to become more surgically precise."
[Associated
Press;
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