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Cornell leads effort to tackle fruit fly

January 10, 2013  By Press release


Spotted-wing drosophila

January 10, 2013, Ithaca, NY – A tiny invasive fruit fly, native to Asia, has become big trouble for raspberries, strawberries, cherries and blueberries coast to coast in the U.S.

In the face of that danger, Cornell University researchers and peers from Northeast and Canada are working together to zero in on ways to combat the invasive spotted-wing drosophila, a poorly understood and highly destructive pest.

“That’s a terrible combination,” said Julie Carroll, the fruit Integrated Pest Management coordinator for the New York State IPM Program, based at Cornell’s New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, N.Y.

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Spotted-wing drosophila took up residence in California a few short years ago; last year, it caused up to $1 billion in nationwide crop and job losses, according to the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council.

“In my 30-plus years in the blueberry business, this is the worst problem I’ve seen yet,” said grower and U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council board member Dennis Doyle. Meanwhile, many raspberry growers had to abandon fall plantings of what had long been a trouble-free crop.

Although spotted-wing drosophila had troubled growers in the Hudson Valley in 2011, it is now just about everywhere in the state, said Greg Loeb, professor of entomology at Cornell. “Some growers lost 100 per cent of their crops, and those losses weren’t just isolated incidents. This new pest is a serious threat.”

While most fruit flies infest fruit that’s already past its prime and unmarketable, “SWD attacks fruit just as it ripens, and you can’t always see the damage until it’s too late,” Loeb said. And because spotted-wing drosophila is so new, scientists’ knowledge of it and how to manage it is rife with yawning gaps.

Loeb, Carroll and Laura McDermott, a Cornell Cooperative Extension small-fruit specialist in eastern New York, convened a daylong meeting of 50 researchers and growers from across the Northeast and from the Canadian provinces Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia in November. The attendees reported to and learned from each other, then listed and voted on every possible research, regulatory and educational angle (79 altogether) they could take to tackle spotted-wing drosophila. The top research priorities included repellants, attract-and-kill techniques and over-wintering biology, among others.

Ideally, researchers will find biological controls – diseases or parasites that prey on spotted-wing drosophila alone.

“But that kind of work takes years. Until then we’ve got to devise the best possible combination of lures, trap crops and low-toxicity sprays,” says Dale-Ila Riggs, president of the New York State Berry Growers Association, which helps promote collaboration between researchers and growers.


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