CSIRO has a history of biological control successes and our scientists are using their expertise to find more natural enemies of introduced weeds and insect pests.
Sustainable mananagement and habitation of 'Outback' and 'Top End' Australia is an important goal which CSIRO researchers working in arid rangelands and tropical savanna environments are addressing.
CSIRO has been working on the biological control of weeds since the 1920s and now has many active biological control projects underway for Australian weeds which cause problems in natural, pastoral and agricultural ecosystems.
Choosing the best potential agent is one step in the biological control process and involves research to find the best candidate for controlling a selected weed species in Australia.
Not all weeds are suitable for biological control. Priority target species are usually identified as those weeds that cause significant damage to both agricultural and natural ecosystems on a national scale.
Host specificity testing is a regulatory requirement and a key tool for assessing whether a candidate agent for biological control is safe to release into a new environment.
Once an agent has been approved for release in Australia the next step in the weed biological control process involves mass-rearing, release and evaluation.
Native-range surveying is one step in the biological control process and involves searching for natural enemies of a particular weed species from the weeds native home range.