Scientists are deploying a tiny species of wasp to combat the spread of a clover-munching pest through the South Island.
Clover root weevil, discovered in New Zealand in 1996, was thought to have travelled here via a shipping container, before being carried to a Waikato farm on farming equipment.
In the North Island, damage by the weevil had been particularly significant in dairy pastures, and dairy farmers had reported substantial loss of productivity due to the weevil.
Increasing clover root weevils populations are today being observed on the west coast of the South Island, but the spread is being closely tracked by AgResearch entomologists Dr Scott Hardwick and Mark McNeill.
The scientists are zeroing in where to release the Irish wasp, a tiny parasitic wasp first released in 2006 and considered a highly effective biocontrol agent for the serious pest.