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Pinellas County

Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services: Exotic fruit flies eradicated from St. Petersburg area

Today, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services announced the eradication of the Oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis, from Pinellas County. In June, the Division of Plant Industry positively identified five Oriental fruit flies detected during routine trapping. A quarantine was established in the St. Petersburg area prohibiting the movement of fruit, vegetables and nuts without a compliance agreement from the department. As of September 23, 2022, the treatment of this area for Oriental fruit fly is complete, no additional detections have been made in three lifecycles of the fly therefore, Oriental fruit fly has been eradicated and the quarantine has been lifted.

"Oriental fruit flies have the ability to cause devastating losses to our food supply and producers, making quick eradication efforts vital," said Commissioner Nikki Fried. "This is a testament of the dedication of our inspectors, researchers, and staff to safeguarding our agriculture industry. I could not be prouder of how quickly they identified and began treating the affected area in St. Petersburg to once more eradicate these pests from our state."

The initial flies were discovered during routine trapping and additional flies were discovered during expanded trapping activities. State and federal agriculture inspectors monitor more than 56,000 fruit fly traps statewide as an early detection network against exotic fruit fly introductions that threaten Florida’s agricultural well-being.

This program highlights the importance of our world-class exotic pest surveillance system and the cutting-edge science we use to eradicate catastrophic plant pests like Oriental fruit fly,” said Division of Plant Industry Director, Dr. Trevor Smith. “Additionally, it showcases the significance of the collaboration of FDACS-DPI with our regulatory and academic partners.”

The Oriental fruit fly has been trapped several times in Florida since 1964 and each time has been successfully eradicated. This species is considered one of the most serious of the world’s fruit fly pests due to its potential economic harm. It feeds on more than 436 different fruits, vegetables and nuts, including fig, loquat, mango, orange, peach, plum, sapote, soursop, Surinam cherry, tangerine, tropical almond and guava. 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.

For more information:
Office of Communications
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
Communications@FDACS.gov

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