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Natural pest control ... using bugs!

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    I'm a bug lover, myself --
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    not from childhood, by the way,
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    but rather late.
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    When I bachelored,
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    majoring in zoology in Tel Aviv University,
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    I kind of fell in love with bugs.
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    And then, within zoology,
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    I took the course or the discipline of entomology,
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    the science of insects.
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    And then I thought, myself, how can I be practical
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    or help in the science of entomology?
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    And then I moved to the world of plant protection --
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    plant protection from insects,
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    from bad bugs.
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    And then within plant protection,
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    I came into the discipline
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    of biological pest control
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    which we actually define
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    as the use of living organisms
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    to reduce populations
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    of noxious plant pests.
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    So it's a whole discipline in plant protection
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    that's aiming at the reduction of chemicals.
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    And biological pest control, by the way,
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    or these good bugs that we are talking about,
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    they've existed in the world for thousands and thousands of years,
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    for a long, long time.
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    But only in the last 120 years
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    people started,
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    or people knew more and more how to exploit, or how to use,
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    this biological control phenomenon,
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    or in fact, natural control phenomenon,
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    to their own needs.
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    Because biological control phenomenon,
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    you can see it in your backyard.
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    Just take a magnifying glass. You see what I have here?
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    That's a magnifier times 10.
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    Yeah, times 10.
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    Just open it.
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    You just twist leaves, and you see a whole new world
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    of minute insects,
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    or little spiders of one millimeter, one and a half,
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    two millimeters long,
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    and you can distinguish between the good ones and the bad ones.
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    So this phenomenon of natural control
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    exists literally everywhere.
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    Here, in front of this building, I'm sure.
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    Just have a look at the plants.
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    So it's everywhere,
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    and we need to know how to exploit it.
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    Well let us go hand by hand
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    and browse through just a few examples.
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    What is a pest?
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    What damage [does] it actually inflict on the plant?
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    And what is the natural enemy,
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    the biologically controlled agent,
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    or the good bug, that we are talking about?
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    In general, I'm going to talk
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    about insects and spiders,
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    or mites, let us call them.
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    Insects, those six-legged organisms
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    and spiders or mites,
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    the eight-legged organisms.
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    Let's have a look at that.
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    Here is a pest, devastating pest, a spider mite,
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    because it does a lot of webbing like a spider.
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    You see the mother in between
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    and two daughters, probably on the left and right,
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    and a single egg on the right-hand side.
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    And then you see what kind of damage it can inflict.
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    On your right-hand side you can see a cucumber leaf,
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    and on the middle, cotton leaf,
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    and on the left a tomato leaf with these little stipplings.
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    They can literally turn from green to white
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    because of the sucking, piercing
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    mouthparts
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    of those spiders.
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    But here comes nature
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    that provides us with a good spider.
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    This is a predatory mite -- just as small as a spider mite, by the way,
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    one millimeter, two millimeters long, not more than that,
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    running quickly, hunting,
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    chasing the spider mites.
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    And here you can see this lady in action
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    on your left-hand side --
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    just pierces, sucks
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    the body fluids on the left-hand side of the pest mite.
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    And after five minutes, this is what you see:
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    just a typical dead corpse,
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    shriveled, sucked-out,
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    dead corpse of the spider mite,
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    and next to it, two satiated individuals
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    of predatory mites,
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    a mother on the left-hand side,
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    a young nymph on the right-hand side.
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    By the way, a meal for them for 24 hours
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    is about five individuals
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    of the spider mites, of the bad mites,
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    or 15 to 20 eggs
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    of the pest mites.
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    By the way, they are hungry always.
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    (Laughter)
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    And there is another example: aphids.
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    By the way, it's springtime now in Israel.
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    When temperature rises sharply,
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    you can see those bad ones, those aphids, all over the plants,
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    in your hibiscus, in your lantana,
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    in the young, fresh foliage
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    of the spring flush, so-called.
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    By the way, with aphids you have only females,
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    like Amazons.
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    Females giving rise to females giving rise to other females.
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    No males at all.
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    Parthenogenesis, [as it] was so called.
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    And they are very happy with that, apparently.
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    Here we can see the damage.
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    Those aphids secrete
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    some sticky, sugary liquid
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    called honeydew,
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    and this just globs
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    the upper parts of the plant.
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    Here you see a typical cucumber leaf
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    that turned actually from green to black
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    because of a black fungus, sooty mold,
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    which is covering it.
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    And here comes the salvation
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    through this parasitic wasp.
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    Here we are not talking about a predator.
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    Here we are talking a parasite --
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    not a two-legged parasite,
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    but an eight-legged parasite, of course.
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    This is a parasitic wasp,
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    again, two millimeters long, slender,
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    a very quick
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    and sharp flier.
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    And here you can see this parasite in action,
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    like in an acrobatic maneuver.
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    She stands vis-a-vis
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    in front of the victim at the right-hand side,
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    bending its abdomen
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    and inserting a single egg,
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    a single egg into the body fluids
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    of the aphid.
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    By the way, the aphid tries to escape.
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    She kicks and bites
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    and secretes different liquids,
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    but nothing will happen, in fact.
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    Only the egg of the parasite
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    will be inserted into the body fluids of the aphid.
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    And after a few days, depending upon temperature,
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    the egg will hatch
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    and the larva of this parasite
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    will eat the aphid from the inside.
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    This is all natural. This is all natural.
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    This is not fiction, nothing at all.
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    Again, in your backyard,
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    in your backyard.
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    But this is the end result.
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    This is the end result:
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    Mummies --
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    M-U-M-M-Y.
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    This is the visual result of a dead aphid
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    encompassing inside,
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    in fact, a developing parasitoid
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    that after a few minutes you see halfway out.
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    The birth is almost complete.
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    You can see, by the way, in different movies, etc.,
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    it takes just a few minutes.
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    And if this is a female, she'll immediately mate with a male
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    and off she goes because time is very short.
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    This female can live only three to four days,
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    and she needs to give rise
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    to around 400 eggs.
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    That means she has 400 bad aphids
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    to put her eggs
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    into their body fluids.
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    And this is of course not the end of it.
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    There is a whole wealth of other natural enemies
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    and this is just the last example.
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    Again, we'll start first with the pest:
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    the thrips.
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    By the way, all these weird names --
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    I didn't bother you with the Latin names of these creatures,
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    okay, just the popular names.
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    But this is a nice, slender,
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    very bad pest.
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    If you can see this, sweet peppers.
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    This is not just an exotic, ornamental sweet pepper.
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    This is a sweet pepper which is not consumable
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    because it is suffering from a viral disease
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    transmitted by those thrip adults.
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    And here comes the natural enemy,
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    minute pirate bug,
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    "minute" because it is rather small.
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    Here you can see the adult, black, and two young ones.
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    And again, in action.
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    This adult pierces the thrips,
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    sucking it within just several minutes,
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    just going to the other prey,
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    continuing all over the place.
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    And if we spread those minute pirate bugs, the good ones,
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    for example, in a sweet pepper plot,
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    they go to the flowers.
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    And look, this flower is flooded
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    with predatory bugs, with the good ones
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    after wiping out the bad ones, the thrips.
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    So this is a very positive situation, by the way.
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    No harm to the developing fruit. No harm to the fruit set.
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    Everything is just fine under these circumstances.
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    But again, the question is,
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    here you saw them on a one-to-one basis --
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    the pest, the natural enemy.
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    What we do is actually this.
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    In Northeast Israel,
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    in Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu,
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    there is a facility
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    that mass-produces those natural enemies.
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    In other words, what we do there,
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    we amplify,
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    we amplify the natural control,
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    or the biological control phenomenon.
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    And in 30,000 square meters
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    of state-of-the-art greenhouses,
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    there, we are mass-producing those predatory mites,
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    those minute pirate bugs,
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    those parasitic wasps, etc., etc.
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    Many different parts.
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    By the way, they have a very nice landscape --
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    you see the Jordanian Mountains on the one hand
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    and the Jordan Valley on the other hand,
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    and a good, mild winter
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    and a nice, hot summer,
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    which is an excellent condition
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    to mass-produce those creatures.
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    And by the way, mass-production --
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    it is not genetic manipulation.
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    There are no GMOs --
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    Genetically Modified Organisms -- whatsoever.
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    We take them from nature,
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    and the only thing that we do,
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    we give them the optimal conditions,
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    under the greenhouses or in the climate rooms,
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    in order to proliferate,
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    multiply and reproduce.
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    And that's what we get, in fact.
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    You see under a microscope.
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    You see in the upper left corner, you see a single predatory mite.
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    And this is the whole bunch of predatory mites.
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    You see this ampoule. You see this one.
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    I have one gram of those predatory mites.
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    One gram's 80,000 individuals,
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    80,000 individuals
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    are good enough
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    to control one acre, 4,000 square meters,
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    of a strawberry plot
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    against spider mites for the whole season
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    of almost one year.
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    And we can produce from this, believe you me,
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    several dozens of kilograms
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    on an annual basis.
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    So this is what I call
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    amplification of the phenomenon.
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    And no, we do not disrupt the balance.
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    On the contrary,
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    because we bring it to every cultural plot
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    where the balance was already disrupted
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    by the chemicals.
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    Here we come with those natural enemies
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    in order to reverse a little bit of the wheel
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    and to bring more natural balance
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    to the agricultural plot by reducing those chemicals.
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    That's the whole idea.
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    And what is the impact?
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    In this table, you can actually see what is an impact
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    of a successful biological control
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    by good bugs.
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    For example, in Israel,
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    where we employ
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    more than 1,000 hectares --
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    10,000 dunams in Israeli terms --
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    of biological pest controlling sweet pepper
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    under protection,
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    75 percent of the pesticides
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    were actually reduced.
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    And Israeli strawberries, even more --
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    80 percent of the pesticides,
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    especially those aimed against pest mites in strawberries.
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    So the impact is very strong.
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    And there goes the question,
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    especially if you ask growers, agriculturists:
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    Why biological control?
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    Why good bugs?
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    By the way, the number of answers you get
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    equals the number of people you ask.
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    But if we go, for example, to this place,
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    Southeast Israel,
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    the Arava area above the Great Rift Valley,
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    where the really top-notch --
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    the pearl of the Israeli agriculture
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    is located,
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    especially under greenhouse conditions, or under screenhouse conditions --
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    if you drive all the way to Eilat, you see this
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    just in the middle of the desert.
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    And if you zoom in,
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    you can definitely watch this,
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    grandparents with their grandchildren,
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    distributing the natural enemies, the good bugs,
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    instead of wearing special clothes
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    and gas masks and applying chemicals.
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    So safety, with respect to the application,
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    this is the number one answer that we get from growers,
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    why biological control.
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    Number two, many growers
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    are in fact petrified
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    from the idea of resistance,
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    that the pests will become resistant
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    to the chemicals,
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    just in our case that bacteria
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    becomes resistant to antibiotics.
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    It's the same, and it can happen very quickly.
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    Fortunately, in either biological control
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    or even natural control,
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    resistance is extremely rare.
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    It hardly happens.
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    Because this is evolution,
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    this is the natural ratio,
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    unlike resistance,
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    which happens in the case of chemicals.
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    And thirdly, public demand.
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    Public demand -- the more the public
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    demands the reduction of chemicals,
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    the more growers become aware of the fact
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    they should, wherever they can and wherever possible,
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    replace the chemical control
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    with biological control.
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    Even here, there is another grower,
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    you see, very interested in the bugs,
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    the bad ones and the good ones,
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    wearing this magnifier already on her head,
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    just walking safely
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    in her crop.
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    Finally, I want to get actually to my vision,
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    or in fact, to my dream.
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    Because, you see, this is the reality.
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    Have a look at the gap.
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    If we take the overall turnover
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    of the biocontrol industry worldwide,
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    it's 250 million dollars.
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    And look at the overall pesticide industry
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    in all the crops throughout the world.
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    I think it's times 100 or something like that.
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    Twenty-five billion.
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    So there is a huge gap to bridge.
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    So actually, how can we do it?
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    How can we bridge, or let's say, narrow, this gap
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    in the course of the years?
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    First of all, we need to find more robust,
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    good and reliable biological solutions,
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    more good bugs
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    that we can either mass-produce
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    or actually conserve in the field.
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    Secondly, to create even more
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    intensive and strict public demand
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    to reduction of chemicals
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    in the agricultural fresh produce.
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    And thirdly, also to increase awareness by the growers
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    to the potential of this industry.
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    And this gap really narrows.
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    Step by step, it does narrow.
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    So I think my last slide is:
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    All we are saying, we can actually sing it:
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    Give nature a chance.
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    So I'm saying it on behalf of all the biocontrol
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    petitioners and implementers,
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    in Israel and abroad,
  • 14:57 - 14:59
    really give nature a chance.
  • 14:59 - 15:01
    Thank you.
  • 15:01 - 15:03
    (Applause)
Title:
Natural pest control ... using bugs!
Speaker:
Shimon Steinberg
Description:

At TEDxTelAviv, Shimon Steinberg looks at the difference between pests and bugs -- and makes the case for using good bugs to fight bad bugs, avoiding chemicals in our quest for perfect produce.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:03

English subtitles

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