Plant Biosecurity CRC   /     Research impact - an end-user’s perspective: Development of a female Q-fly lure

Description

From the 2016 Plant Biosecurity CRC Science Exchange: New controls are urgently needed to manage Queensland fruit fly (Q-fly) as the long-used cover-sprays for fruit fly control are being withdrawn for regulatory reasons. Q-fly is the most serious insect pest of summer fruits, crops which have a combined value of approximately $260 million per annum. Effective lures/ traps for mature, egg-laying female flies are especially needed as currently available controls which target the egg-laying females are weak. This research will assist in the development of synthetic fruit fly attractant odours and a commercially viable device that traps female Q-fly in the field. Commercialisation of an effective Q-fly lure will deliver significant benefit for Australian growers through improving crop productivity, reducing barriers to export, and assisting in lowering within and between-season fruit fly populations. Speakers: Andrew Finlay; Paul Cunningham

Subtitle
From the 2016 Plant Biosecurity CRC Science Excha…
Duration
00:27:34
Publishing date
2018-04-27 02:23
Link
https://soundcloud.com/plant-biosecurity-crc/research-impact-an-end-users-perspective-development-of-a-female-q-fly-lure
Contributors
  Plant Biosecurity CRC
author  
Enclosures
http://feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/322656609-plant-biosecurity-crc-research-impact-an-end-users-perspective-development-of-a-female-q-fly-lure.mp3
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