Exotic Fruit Fly Found In Florida

The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services has positively identified the presence of two guava fruit flies, Bactrocera correcta, collected during routine trapping. The origin of the flies, collected in the Boynton Beach area of Palm Beach County, has not been determined.

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Exotic Fruit Fly Found In Central Florida“Though disturbing, this find confirms that our early detection system for pests and diseases is among the best in the nation. Our staff, working closely with our federal partners, has begun intensive delimiting trapping in the area around the positive finds,” Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam said.

The department, in cooperation with USDA, launched an intensified trapping program in a 55-square-mile area surrounding the fruit fly finds. Staff will check traps on a daily basis for one week to determine if there is a reproducing population of this invasive pest. If staff does not discover additional flies, traps will be checked every week for three life cycles of the fly – approximately 60 days.

The department has detected the guava fruit fly several times in Florida since 1999, but the fly has not become established. The fly is considered a threat to much of Florida agriculture and attacks fruit and vegetable varieties, including guava, peach, mango, fig, date, tropical almond, sapodilla, rose apple, jujube, castor bean, and sandalwood.

Guava fruit fly is being detected with increasing frequency in new areas of the world. The fruit flies lay their eggs in host fruits and vegetables. In a few days, the eggs hatch and maggots render the fruits or vegetables inedible.

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Avatar for frank gabry frank gabry says:

FL has become the ‘MECCA’ of the Green Industry, as I attend class via DEP/FSU Sarasota, per capita between Sarasota & Naples involvement in the green industry is highest in the world! This exotic fly needs all of us to be diligent & trap any possible fly’s & bring it to extension agent ASAP! We must preserve our industry as either or growers of any crop to landscapers to maintenance personal. PLEASE have a good eye & look as we are in the field! This way we can concur this pest before it becomes epidemic!

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