B4o—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 14,1981 Medflies aren’t new pest WASHINGTON, D.C. The Mediterranean fruit fly, commonly known as the Medfly, may be causing a commotion in California, but the fact is—the little winged bug is nothing new. It was first found in West Africa in the early 1800 s, reports National Wildlife Federation, and since then has spread throughout most of the world. Not a traveler by nature—the insect can fly only a mile or so on its own—the medfly’s extensive excursions could only have taken place with the help of people. Hitching rides with man as he crossed continents, the pest has reached all parts of the globe, except Canada, most of Asia, and the arctic zones The National Wildlife Federation explains that despite quaran tines, sterilization campaigns, and in secticide spraying, the Medfly’s cream-colored larvae, or maggots, continue to destroy the insides of more than 250 kinds of fruit and vegetables, including apples, apricots, most citrus, coffee berries, mangoes, nectarines, peaches, plums, and tomatoes. How can one tiny insect smaller than a housefly cause so much havoc? The Medtly makes up in reproduction powers what it lacks in size. And the hotter the climate, the faster it procreates. In sunny Hawaii it produces 12 or 13 generations a year. About a week after they become mature, male Medflies gather in groups on host fruits or nearby leaves. Females are attracted by the male’s scent and characteristic buzz. After mating the female uses her sharp-pointed ovipositor, or egg-laying apparatus, to puncture the skin of a just npenmg fruit, and she deposits about a dozen whitish glistening eggs in the hole she made. A single Medfly female in the wild can lay up to 500 eggs during her adult reproductive lifetime of about a month. Her eggs hatch after a day or two and the soft bodied larvae feed on the fruit, which fall to the ground prematurely and rot. After a week or two, the mature lar vae—now about one third of an inch long crawl out. Each one burrows into the soil and forms a brown, seedlike pupa. After about nine days, it emerges as a fly to begin the cycle again. How is this prolific and damaging pest controlled? In most Mediterranean coun tries it isn't. The pest is simply too widespread, and some nations report up to 100 percent in festation of soft fruits and a few vegetables. Australia, however, has fought a winning Medfly, which is con fined to the southwest corner of the country. In Adelaide, the capital of South Australia, residents have been trained to recognize the rather pretty fly with its yellow abdomen and brown bands on its two clear, drooping wings, and they report sightings immediately. Tins method of early detection has helped eradicate the fly each tune it has appeared. Another method of early detection involves setting up traps which LOCAL DISTRIBUTORS FOR: DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED. *w. "WwP'' ijl^L #r -?-5L , % A \ <9 t look like cardboard pup tents. The traps are baited with a sex lure which attracts the flies. The insects are then captured inside the trap by a sticky substance on the tent’s floor. Both Israel and California spray an insecticide-plus-bait to combat the Medfly. The protein bait attracts the flies, which are then killed by the insecticide, usually malathion. Other weapons used against the Medfly include stripping of host fruits, release of sterile VERNON MYERS, INC. ‘‘lip 1 V} »• r *>* < 't * ~ v? ~' * * % Hri .if*. flies, and biological control by 1 means of parasites. Malathion, the most effective tool loi combating large Medfly outbreaks, is regarded by most scientists as a safe pesticide, but as Jorge Manring, a toxicologist with the National Wildlife Federation explains, “If it’s economically possible, we always prefer to avoid use of any pesticide. Perhaps it’s time we considered such land use techniques as alter nating acres of fruit with other crops. That way you set up a biological barrier to both the Medfly and other damaging in sects.” STEEL BUILDINGS & GRAIN STORAGE 274 Old Mt. Gretna Rd. Lebanon, Pa. 17042 Ph0ne:(717)867-4139 * Z&Z'-hf't. Rabbit course After studying Penn State’s Rabbit Production course, rabbit owners from ages 9 through 99 can earn more net income per young rabbit marketed. 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