The Riverside Press-Enterprise

2 fruit pest quarantine­s are in place now

- Laura Simpson Contributi­ng Columnist Have questions? Email gardening@scng.com.

QCould you explain what is going on with the latest fruit fly quarantine? I heard that the Department of Agricultur­e was stripping fruit from trees in Redlands.

AA few weeks ago I wrote about the Asian citrus psyllid, its role in spreading citrus greening disease, also known as huanglongb­ing or HLB, and what we, as home gardeners, can do to help. Now there is an additional quarantine that is targeted at the oriental fruit fly (Bactrocera dorsalis). Many people (including some master gardeners) have questions about the two different quarantine­s and what they mean.

The Asian citrus psyllid does not cause direct harm to citrus, except that some psyllids carry the HLB disease. I would compare it to the role of mosquitoes and malaria. Not all mosquitoes can give you malaria, but it’s important to keep their population under control so we don’t have a malaria outbreak.

The Oriental fruit fly, however, directly damages over 400 types of fruit. It is an invasive pest that originated in Southeast Asia and first appeared in Florida in 2002. It’s slightly bigger

This little vandal, the Oriental fruit fly, damages more than 400 varieties of crops and is the insect behind one of two fruit quarantine­s in California.

than the average housefly — a little less than half an inch long. It’s yellow with a black “T” on its abdomen. It has clear wings, and the females have a prominent ovipositor (a pointy structure that allows it to deposit eggs inside fruit).

Once the eggs hatch, many larvae emerge and feast on the fruit’s flesh. They are slightly less than half an inch long and pale yellow/white. Of course, this makes the fruit disgusting and inedible. If you thought finding a coddling moth larva in your apple was bad, try finding hundreds of “disco rice” in your fruit!

Since the oriental fruit fly can infest almost any type of fruit, it can potentiall­y cost billions of dollars in lost crops. Fortunatel­y, it doesn’t appear to have spread too far — yet.

I think we can all agree we don’t want to find a party in our produce, so here are some recommenda­tions for helping to stop the spread of this particular­ly odious pest.

• Don’t move produce or plants that have not been inspected. Bringing produce home from the grocery store is OK because that has been inspected. Unfortunat­ely, bringing your neighbor or co-workers a bag of fruit from your own tree is not OK. If you have more citrus than you can consume, you can juice it or make limoncello to share. Making marmalade, jelly, jam, curd or candied citrus peel to share is also OK. Just don’t move unprocesse­d and/or uninspecte­d produce from your property because you may end up sharing more than just fruit.

• Please allow workers from the Department of Agricultur­e to do their work. They may have to inspect your trees, spray or set traps. If they inspect and find the pest, they will strip the tree of its fruit and dispose of it safely. They may spray pesticide but will always notify before doing so and will make every effort to minimize exposure to bees and other beneficial insects. The traps contain small amounts of insecticid­e and a pheromone to attract male flies.

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COURTESY PHOTO

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