Research News & Features

Environment

Contact: Prof. Richard Zack, 509/335-3394, zack@wsu.edu

Virgin Palouse Prairie May Serve As Native Insect Refuge


WSU entomology Professor Richard Zack and graduate student Jessica Thompson setup a lighted insect trap on a piece of virgin Palouse Prairie south of Pullman. Photo courtesy Steve Hanks, Lewiston Morning Tribune.

PULLMAN, Wash. -- A 30-plus-acre slope near here may be one of the last, best chances to understand the insect world of the pre-agriculture Palouse Prairie, according to Richard Zack, a Washington State University professor of entomology.

He and graduate student Jessica Thompson of Chico, Calif., are conducting research on the plot this summer to determine how the insect population - especially the moth population - there differs from the insect population in surrounding agricultural areas.

"The question is: Does it still maintain an insect fauna that probably would have been common throughout the area before we started farming here?" said Zack. "The insects aren't necessarily rare everywhere, but they are rare on the Palouse."

The slope was donated to WSU years ago, said Zack. It is relatively steep and has never been farmed, and as a result, features native plants such as wild roses and numerous wildflowers that are no longer prevalent on the Palouse. "It is large enough to support the plants and insects that would have been present throughout the area before farming."

Once or twice a week, Thompson visits the slope to set up traps. The next day, she records the kind and number of bugs collected. Zack said the study already has produced some interesting results.

"As you would expect, the number of moths there is relatively high," he said. "But the diversity of moths is much, much greater than what we find in our traps on the adjacent farm land."

Zack said the research could lead to the preservation of similar areas on the Palouse. "These areas usually are not farmable, so one goal may be to at least map them with the idea of keeping them as natural as possible for the preservation of native plants and insects," he said. "We're trying to protect areas of the native Palouse with as little detrimental effect as possible on what else is going on here - primarily farming."

There would be no economic loss to preserving the areas, Zack said, and there could be some very real economic benefits.

"As the use of biocontrols of pests increases, these areas could provide a refuge for the biocontrol agents over the winter or after their particular crop is harvested," he said. For example, if a variety of wasp is introduced into a wheat field as a way to control aphids, the unfarmed refuges would give the wasps a place to live after the crop is gone. "There are definitely economic reasons to preserve these relic areas."

Related News

  • WSU Anthropology Graduate Students Receive NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

    PULLMAN, Wash. —Two graduate students made Washington State University history on April 5 when they became the first recipients of National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships in the Anthropology Department.

  • WSU Astrobiologist’s Book Argues NASA’s Viking Discovered Martian Life in 1976

    PULLMAN, Wash. – But for our limited understanding of one of our closest planetary neighbors and our decidedly terrestrial views on biology, the discovery of life on an alien world might well have been celebrated nearly 35 years ago.

  • New Evidence Suggests Northwest Lava Flows Could Have Altered Earth's Climate, Wiped Out Species

    PULLMAN, Wash.—New research suggests the volcanic birth of the Northwest's Columbia Plateau happened much more quickly than previously thought and with an intensity that may have changed the earth’s climate and caused some plants and animals to go extinct.

  • Tackling 'mother of all multi-scale modeling problems’

    Addressing one of the biggest challenges in the nuclear industry - the sturdiness of materials that protect the core reaction - Professor Hussein Zbib and colleagues have received a three-year grant to better understand multiscale models and methods for nuclear materials. While many other countries have expanded their use of nuclear power, U.S. programs have been stymied by safety concerns. No nuclear power plant has been built in the U.S. since the 1979 Three-Mile Island accident.

  • WSU's VanReken Earns DOE Early Career Research Grant

    PULLMAN, Wash. -- Timothy VanReken, Washington State University professor in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, has been selected to receive funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) as part of the Department of Energy Office of Science new Early Career Research Program.

  • Increased productivity shrinks carbon footprint of cattle

    PULLMAN – Discussion of the environmental impact of animal agriculture is very different when discussed in terms of productivity instead of individual animals, according to one of the newest members of the WSU Department of Animal Sciences.

  • $6M in NSF grants a coup for graduate training

    WSU’s recent receipt of two grants has “lifted our graduate and research programs … to a new level,’’ according to Candis Claiborn, dean of the College of Engineering and Architecture.

  • Luring natural predators to protect orchards

    Researchers and orchardists know quite a bit about the major pests in tree fruit systems, but what about the natural enemies of those pests? Scientists at WSU’s Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center in Wenatchee are working to learn more about these beneficial bugs in an effort to better leverage them in pest control.

  • In Fight Against Pathogens, Calcium Helps Plants Make Their Own Aspirin

    PULLMAN, Wash. — Calcium builds strong bones, good teeth—and healthy plants, according to a new study from Washington State University. Experiments show that calcium, when bound to a protein called calmodulin, prompts plants to make salicylic acid (SA) when threatened by infection or other danger. SA is a close chemical relative of aspirin. In plants, SA acts as a signal molecule that kicks off a series of reactions that help defend against external threats.

Research News and Features, PO Box 641040, Washington State University 99164-0932, 509-335-3581, Contact Us