



- Focus Areas
- Agricultural Pest Management
- Ecology/Biological Control
- Evolutionary Biology
- Freshwater and Estuarine Entomology
- Insect Pathology
- Molecular Biology, Physiology, Toxicology, and Molecular Genetics
- Pesticide Technology, Assessment, and Policy
- Systematics/Morphology
- Urban, Structural, and Green Industries Pest Management
- Facilities
- Collaborators
- Research Opportunities
- Focus Areas



Archived News
Mon, Nov 12, 2007
Scorpion Toxin Makes Fungus Deadly to Insect Pests
University of Maryland entomology professor Raymond St. Leger
has discovered how to use scorpion genes to create a hypervirulent
fungus that can kill specific insect pests, including mosquitoes that
carry malaria and a beetle that destroys coffee crops, but does not
contaminate the environment as chemical pesticides do.Thu, Mar 9, 2006
Can Termites Hitchhike North in Mulch From Gulf Hurricane Debris?
As spring gardening approaches, concern has spread about the risk of the Formosan subterranean termite (Coptotermes formosanus) moving to other states in mulch produced from Katrina and Rita debris. The termite wreaks millions of dollars of damage annually to wooden structures, live deciduous trees and other woody plants in a dozen southern states, including Louisiana. Barbara Thorne , professor of entomology and termite expert at the University of Maryland, comments on the situation.





