http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20020629/food.asp

Slugging It Out with Caffeine
Janet Raloff

Anyone who has raised tomatoes in a moist environment knows the
tell-tale sign: Overnight, a ripe, juicy orb sustains a huge, oozing
wound. If you arrive early, you might catch the dastardly culprit: a
slug. 

 
In one test, scientists sprayed soil with dilute caffeine and then
watched as slugs, like this one, made haste to get away.
Hollingsworth/ARS
 

Who would have thought that a defense was as close as your coffee cup?


Federal scientists have discovered that the same chemical that provides
the pick-me-up in a cup of java is a deadly turn-off to snails and
slugs. Caffeine renders their food unpalatable. Applied to their soil,
the stimulant causes snails and slugs to writhe uncontrollably. At the
proper dose, these mollusks succumb to the neurotoxin fairly quickly. 

The discovery emerged in greenhouse experiments by Agricultural
Research Service scientists in Hilo, Hawaii. As the wettest city in the
United States, it's slug heaven, observes Robert G. Hollingsworth, who
led a series of caffeine experiments reported in the June 27 Nature. For
each trial, he mined 50 to 100 slugs from the field*aka his backyard.


But why caffeine? Earl Campbell, now with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, and his ARS colleagues stumbled on this anti-slug measure while
looking for a pesticide to eradicate noisy frogs. 

Because there are frogs 

The Hawaiian Islands evolved in the absence of amphibians and reptiles.
However, some 40 different species of these nonnatives have taken up
permanent residency on at least a few of the state's lush islands. They
arrived through trade, stops by tourist vessels, and the deliberate
release of pets. 

Two of the more recent and troublesome of these aliens are tiny
Caribbean frogs from the same genus. Though both are noisy, the species
Eleutherodactylus coqui has become especially vexing. Its mating calls,
which can go on all night*and year-round in low-lying areas*reach 90
decibels, the volume of barking dogs and vacuum cleaners. The
Occupational Safety and Health Administration requires that workers wear
hearing protectors when noise averages 85 decibels or higher. At that
volume, sustained exposures can produce irreversible hearing loss. 

In parts of Hawaii since the mid 1980s, this volume has become typical
of backyard coqui choruses. So, while amphibian populations throughout
much of the world are declining or becoming extinct, mushrooming
populations of Hawaii's frogs have become not only a public nuisance but
also an ecological nightmare. The situation puts state and federal
biologists charged with safeguarding Hawaii's environment in the
uncomfortable position of targeting healthy populations of cute frogs
for execution. 

After working their way through soaps, surfactants, and off-the-shelf
pesticides*all without antifrog effects*Campbell's group started to
evaluate products in the grocery store, including acetaminophen
(Tylenol) and cigarette nicotine. "We had very poor results with almost
all of these," Campbell told Science News Online. Finally, his team
tried a caffeine-rich anti-sleep preparation. "It was the only thing
that worked at a legal [label's recommended] level," Campbell says. 

When field trials established its promise, the researchers petitioned
the Environmental Protection Agency for an emergency exemption to use
caffeine against Hawaii's coqui and greenhouse (E. planirostris) frogs.
Provisional permission came through last November. Preliminary, targeted
eradication and control programs are now set to begin within the next
few months. 

It was during early evaluation of caffeine's potential that the
researchers applied a dilute concentration of the compound to the soil
in greenhouses where many frogs were holed up. At once, Campbell noticed
that slugs began surfacing and dying. 

That interested Hollingsworth, an entomologist studying pests of
ornamental plants, such as potted orchids and anthuriums. Small snails
have proven a bane to orchid growers, he notes. Though they don't hurt
the blooms, some of these shelled slugs chew away at roots, loosening
the plants' anchor. 

So, Hollingsworth launched tests of various concentrations of dilute
caffeine against those orchid snails, known as Zonitoides arboreus, and
that local garden denizen, the two-striped slug (Veronicella cubensis).
The tests showed what plants around the globe had discovered long ago:
Caffeine makes a good all-natural pesticide. 

Plants have known, all along* 

Caffeine, though associated widely with coffee, also appears naturally
in tea, cacao*the source of chocolate*and a host of other plants.
The reason, according to the 2001 opus The World of Caffeine by Bennett
A. Weinberg and Bonnie K. Bealer, flora the world over have found this
compound a useful weapon to control predation by bacteria, fungi, and
insects. 

However, the book notes, exploitation of this natural poison comes at a
price, because "the very drug that helps them destroy their enemies
ultimately kills them as well." With coffee, for instance, as branches,
leaves, and berries fall to the ground, caffeine leaches out of this
litter, eventually enriching soil caffeine concentrations to a point
where they become toxic to the parent plant. This is one reason that the
productivity of coffee plantations tends to wane with time, the book
observes. 

In their new field trials, the Hawaiian scientists have also seen
evidence of plant toxicity with some of the higher pesticidal
concentrations of caffeine. However, they've also witnessed responses of
the targeted pests to low concentrations. 

A 4-ounce solution of 2 percent caffeine applied to the soil of 4-inch
greenhouse pots devastated garden slugs, Hollingsworth found. Within 3.5
hours, 75 percent of the slugs emerged from hiding in the soil. Within 2
days, 92 percent of the slugs were dead. When the researchers dropped
the concentration of caffeine by half, it took another day to achieve
the same body count. When they halved the caffeine level yet again, the
kill rate dropped to 55 percent and the time to death extended to 5
days. 

Even concentrations of only 0.1 percent caffeine may prove useful.
Sprayed onto such slug-prized cuisine as cabbage leaves, those
concentrations deterred feeding by 62 percent, respectively, when
compared to uncaffeinated salad greens. This suggests that a regular
spray of leftover coffee, which tends to have a caffeine content of
about 0.1 to 0.05 percent, might control nighttime crop losses in the
garden. 

Hollingsworth also reports a "contact" repellency of caffeine on garden
slugs. In one unpublished experiment, he sprayed half of the soil in a
pot with 2 percent caffeine and left the rest untreated. "I put the
slugs onto the part that was not sprayed*and watched some of them go
right up to the edge of the sprayed part and then turn around," he
notes. 

Eighteen years ago, Harvard Medical School scientist James Nathanson
reported finding that caterpillars would actively avoid eating garden
leaves sprayed with caffeine. Though this led many researchers at the
time to hail caffeine as the next all-natural pesticide, commercial
pesticide manufacturers passed on any opportunity to exploit the
finding. According to Dave Ryan of EPA in Washington, the agency's
pesticide division has "no record of caffeine as an active ingredient in
any [registered] pesticide"*besides, that is, the recent temporary
permit for the use of dilute caffeine against Hawaiian frogs. 

Says Hollingsworth, "I think one reason caffeine never went anywhere as
a pesticide for bugs is that most insects have this [water repelling]
exoskeleton, making it hard for the caffeine to penetrate." Not so,
slugs and snails. "The mucus, which is the basis for their locomotion,
is very high in water content," he observes, and it permits
water-soluble caffeine easy entry. Once inside the critters, the new
Hawaiian studies show, the neurotoxic caffeine destabilizes the
mollusks' heart rate. 

Now, Hollingsworth says, the trick will be to find ways to package
caffeine so that it's available to kill frogs without posing a risk to
plants or untargeted organisms. 

For me, an avid tea drinker, I'll just try spraying vine-ripening
tomatoes with my husband's leftover coffee. It seems the best use of
that other brew. 


References:

Hollingsworth, R.G., et al. 2002. Caffeine as a repellent for slugs and
snails. Nature 417(June 27):915-916. Abstract available at
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/417915a.

Further Readings:

Bernardo, R. 2001. EPA approves plan to fight frogs with caffeine.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin (Oct. 2). Available at
http://starbulletin.com/2001/10/02/news/story3.html 

Hawaii Department of Agriculture (HDOA) pesticide label (and
attachments) for application of caffeine to control Caribbean frogs
(Eleutherodactylus coqui and Eleutherodactylus planirostris) in the
State of Hawaii: Label.

Milius, S. 2000. Colossal study shows amphibian woes. Science News
157(April 15):247. Available at
http://www.sciencenews.org/20000415/fob8.asp.

Raloff, J. 2000. The power of caffeine and pale tea. Science News
157(April 15):251. 

_____. 1984. Caffeine: The 'all natural' pesticide. Science News
126(Oct. 13):229. 

Vergano, D. 1996. Smallest frog leaps into the limelight. Science News
150(Dec. 7):357.

Weinberg, B.A., and B.K. Bealer. 2001. The World of Caffeine: The
Science and Culture of the World's Most Popular Drug. New York:
Routledge. See
http://reference.routledge-ny.com/books.cfm?isbn=0415927226.


Sources:

Earl Campbell
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Box 50088
Honolulu, HI 96850

Robert G. Hollingsworth
U.S. Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center
USDA-Agricultural Research Service
PO Box 4459
Hilo, HI 96720
E-mail: 

Dave Ryan
Press Office
Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20460






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