WHITE BUTTERFLY
INVASION OF AUSTRALIA HAVOC IN GARDENS On a front of 100 miles an army in white is invading Australia, defying mountains, rivers, and forests and increasing in numbers as it goes, says the Australian News Letter issued by the Empire Press Union, Australian section. It is the army of the cabbage white butterfly that has already caused havoc in suburban gardens, where cabbage, cauliflower, turnips and broccoli went down before the attack.
It is regarded all over the world as potentially the most destructive of the insects that attack these plants. The white butterfly came into Australia in 1939. The first specimen was found in the University Gardens, Melbourne, in March that year, and then numbers of others were reported from Williamstown. Before that, the nearest place where the cabbage white butterfly had been found was New Zealand, and it is believed some came here in vegetables from ships. A map of white butterfly distribution shows that at the end of the autumn of 193!) they were still confined to a small area about Melbourne. Next season they had flown in thousands to the east and west of the state and north across the river Murray nlo New South Wales.
Now they are in Tasmania, and are working far west in Victoria toward South Australia. Victorian conditions suit them well, and, as they have spread in America as far south as the Gidf states, they will probably go far north in Australia.
Rain does not worry them, and they can fly for hundreds of miles. They have been seen hundreds of miles out over the Atlantic and still flying west.
In New Zealand, says the News Letter, scientists are trying to control the butterfly by setting wasps on to them. Large supplies of two parasitic wasps have been introduced from England and. liberated. In Victoria the entomologists are also working on methods oi biological control, but they are still reticent about this work.
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20548, 7 May 1941, Page 12
Word Count
325WHITE BUTTERFLY Gisborne Herald, Volume LXVIII, Issue 20548, 7 May 1941, Page 12
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