Join The ‘Air Potato Patrol’ To Battle Invasive Plant

July 7, 2017

In Florida, air potato is a state-wide problem, but the battle against the invasive plant starts in greenbelts and back yards, according to scientists with the University of Florida and the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

Experts are calling on the public to join the Air Potato Patrol, a citizen science project that trains residents to identify and report air potato vines in Florida and the Southeast.
“If someone has air potato vines on their property, we want to get status updates on these plants —  for example, are they growing and expanding or are they dying back?” said William Lester, a horticulture agent with the UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

“We also want to know if people see air potato leaf beetles on the vines. That’s because the beetle eats only this plant, and we want to know how many are out there seasonally, and how successfully  they’ve been able to control the vine,” he said.

Air potato is a vining plant named for potato-like tubers called bulbils. The plant grows aggressively  and can quickly overtake and kill other vegetation. The plant is currently found in 60 of the 67 counties in Florida, as well as in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas.

Air potato leaf beetles, which are native to parts of Africa and Asia, eat only air potato leaves and can decrease the density of air potato in an area by 25 to 70 percent, according to a UF/IFAS Extension publication. From 2012 to 2015, the U.S. Department of Agriculture released air potato leaf beetles at more than 2,000 locations in Florida.

About a year ago, Lester started getting calls from locals concerned that they weren’t seeing as many air potato beetles as they used to. Lester suspected that winter weather had hit the beetles harder than usual, leading to the decline in numbers.

Those calls showed that everyday people were a valuable source of intelligence in the ground fight against air potato.

In response, Lester contacted Chris Kerr, who leads the air potato beetle rearing program at the  FDACS Division of Plant Industry facility in Gainesville As the two discussed how they could get the public more involved in air potato control, the Air Potato Patrol was born.

Lester and Kerr collaborated on the videos and training materials that teach citizen scientists how to identify air potato and report on plant growth and beetle activity. Videos and more information on how to participate are available at airpotatobeetle.com.

“Anyone who wants to learn more about controlling this invasive plant, and has access to air potato on their property or a friends’, is welcomed to participate,” Lester said. “The data collected will be used to help better understand the timing and seasonal distribution for both air potato plants and beetles.”

Residents with air potato vines on their properties can request beetles online.

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Comments

7 Responses to “Join The ‘Air Potato Patrol’ To Battle Invasive Plant”

  1. Barbara Hammerbeck on January 7th, 2019 1:16 am

    Air potatoes destroying my palm trees, haven’t seen any lily beetles would love to get some

  2. Kirby Locklear on August 13th, 2017 10:07 pm

    There are air potato vines growing in my backyard

  3. Sandra Martin on July 10th, 2017 6:27 pm

    I have a half acre cover with them..I have tried everything to get rid of them.. but every yr it gets worse. .I have never seen beetles on them..HELP.

  4. Cyndi Mundhenk on July 10th, 2017 6:07 pm

    We have them and they are spreading fast from the neighbors house. We chopped them all down in our yard but the neighbors are out of our control!

  5. 429SCJ on July 10th, 2017 6:03 am

    Turn the goats loose on those infested areas. No more air potatoes. no nothing; a mars like landscape.

  6. William on July 7th, 2017 6:28 am

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    Videos and more information on how to participate are available at airpotatobeetle.com.

  7. Dick on July 7th, 2017 6:20 am

    Do we contact local Extension office. Anyone have phone nr/e-mail address handy?