Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

Fruit fly quarantine expands again in California

Quarantines have been established in the regions around Rancho Cordova and Redlands, California, after multiple detections of Bactrocera dorsalis, a key agricultural pest.

Known as the oriental fruit fly, the insect is known to attack more than 400 fruits and vegetables, including apricots, cherries, citrus, figs, peaches, pears, plums and tomatoes, according to the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. New quarantine areas set up by the California Department of Food and Agriculture cover a combined 218 miles.

The new zones come after CDFA imposed a 112-square-mile quarantine in Santa Clara County in August, temporarily prohibiting any shipment of fruits and vegetables out of these areas. Similar restrictions were imposed in Southern California last summer.

Santa Clara County agricultural commissioner Joseph Deviney has noted that infestations of the fruit fly have doubled statewide in recent years.

Damage occurs when the female fruit fly lays her eggs inside the fruit. The eggs hatch into maggots, which tunnel through the flesh of the fruit, making it unfit for consumption.

“It’s a serious threat,” Deviney told KGO-TV in San Francisco, noting that the female typically deposits 10 to 100 eggs per piece of fruit. “So when you go to pick your fruit off your tree, you open it up, it’ll have 10 to 100 maggots. A single female fly can lay 1,500 eggs easy.”

IPM principles
Following the principles of Integrated Pest Management (IPM), agricultural officials use the “male attractant” technique as the mainstay of the eradication effort for this invasive species. This approach has successfully eliminated dozens of fruit fly infestations in California.

Trained workers squirt a small patch of fruit fly attractant mixed with a very small dose of an organic pesticide, Spinosad, approximately 8-10 feet off the ground on street trees and similar surfaces; male fruit flies are attracted to the mixture and perish after consuming it. The male attractant treatment program is being carried out over an area that extends 1.5 miles from each site where the oriental fruit flies were trapped.

While fruit flies and other invasive species that threaten California’s crops and natural environment are sometimes detected in agricultural areas, the vast majority are found in urban and suburban communities.


For more information: farmprogress.com

Publication date: