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New York state

USDA establishes European Cherry Fruit Fly quarantine in Niagara County

The United States Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has established a quarantine for European cherry fruit fly (ECFF) in New York. A portion of Niagara County is quarantined for the invasive fruit fly following the detection of 51 flies in 2017. APHIS and the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets (NYSDAM) are working collaboratively on this detection.

European cherry fruit fly is the most serious pest of sweet cherries in Europe. The fly attacks only the fruit of its host plants, causing it to rot and fall off the tree. If European cherry fruit fly becomes established in the United States, it could affect U.S. access to foreign cherry markets and cause lower prices and economic losses for U.S. cherry growers.

The ECFF quarantine area encompasses approximately 92 square miles of Niagara County, and the quarantine boundary description can be found online at:

The quarantine affects local residents – residents are urged to consume home-grown cherries on site and not move the fruit from their property. Residents are also asked not to move soil underneath the drip line of an ECFF host plant in the regulated area, because doing so could spread fruit fly larva to other areas.

A list of host plants can be found at:

During September and October 2017, APHIS confirmed ECFF in traps placed in wild honeysuckle and sweet cherry on state and public lands along the Niagara River in Niagara County, New York. APHIS is responding to these detections by conducting another trapping survey this year. Throughout May and continuing this month, APHIS is placing about 6,000 traps in Niagara County and in a portion of Erie County. The trapping survey will help monitor the ECFF population and determine if there are other locations where the invasive fruit fly is present.
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