This invasive fruit fly will be the
subject of the keynote address at this year’s Missouri Blueberry School
conference, Feb. 21-22 on the Missouri State University campus in Springfield.
“Blueberry production offers good
potential for Missouri farmers,” said Patrick Byers, University of Missouri
Extension horticulture specialist in Greene County. “But spotted wing
drosophila and diseases are challenges that we must address.”
Keynote speaker Hannah Burrack,
entomologist at North Carolina State University, will outline SWD biology and
history, and help producers develop a management strategy.
Spotted wing drosophila showed up in
North America around 2008 and by last year had made its debut in the Show-Me
State.
Unlike most fruit flies, SWD attacks
healthy, undamaged fruit. The female has a serrated ovipositor that penetrates
the unbroken skin of good fruit to lay eggs. This allows the larvae to develop
inside the fruit and provides an opening for bacteria, mold and fungi.
Joining Burrack in the SWD
discussion will be Jaime Pinero, state integrated pest management specialist
for Lincoln University, who will provide a Missouri perspective on the issue.
Other topics will include soil
health management, preserving blueberry fruit by flash freezing, the Food
Safety Modernization Act and its implications for Missouri blueberry producers,
disease identification and diagnostic techniques, and updates on the 2014 Small
Fruit and Grape Spray Guide.
The second day of the conference,
Feb. 22, will include visits to area blueberry farms for hands-on
demonstrations of blueberry management.
Registration for the two-day 2014
Missouri Blueberry School is $50 per person ($35 for each additional person
from the same family or farm) and includes educational materials and a spotted
wing drosophila monitoring trap (one per farm or family).
For a registration packet, please
contact Kelly McGowan at
417-881-8909 or, or register online.
For more information about the
conference, go to extension.missouri.edu/blueberry or
contact Patrick Byers at 417-881-8909.
Established in 2011, the Missouri
Blueberry School is a collaboration of University of Missouri, Missouri State
University and Lincoln University. Calling on the expertise of blueberry
experts in Missouri and around the country, the Missouri Blueberry School
presents accurate, timely and relevant information through conferences, on-farm
workshops, individual consultations and support services.
(By Curt Wohleber, Writer, University
of Missouri Extension)
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