Abstract: | Two leaf-feeding chrysomelid beetles, Leptinotarsa texana and L. defecta, have been successfully established on Solanum elaeagnifolium, a solanaceous weed inadvertently introduced into South Africa from North America during the early 1900s. Unlike L. defecta, which remains localised and scarce, L. texana has proliferated at a number of release sites. Surveys of the damage caused by L. texana on S. elaeagnifolium showed that in some situations the beetles reached densities where the host plants were completely stripped of leaves, flowers and bark, whereas fruits were not eaten by the beetles. Longer term studies in plots with and without L. texana showed that even at relatively low levels of abundance of the beetles, the growth of S. elaeagnifolium was suppressed and the capacity of the plants to produce fruits was severely curtailed. As a result L. texana has the potential to be an effective biological control agent of S. elaeagnifolium in South Africa and elsewhere. |