A natural control for an invasive fly that has plagued soft-fruit crops like 海角社区鈥檚 wild blueberries is being tested by scientists at the University of 海角社区.
Spotted wing drosophila (SWD) infest healthy, ripening fruit with their eggs and larvae, impacting their marketability. Without control measures, the flies can destroy of late-season berry crops. Crop loss from SWD exceeds an nationwide.
In response, Phillip Fanning, assistant professor of agricultural entomology at U海角社区, and his collaborators looked to nature for a solution. Ganaspis brasiliensis, commonly referred to as the samba wasps, parasitize SWD in its native range of Southeast Asia. The insects, which do not have stingers, are about the size of a grain of rice. Fanning released up to 1,000 samba wasps on wild blueberry fields in Hancock, Knox, Waldo and Washington counties this month after more than a decade of preparation.
鈥The threat of crop damage that SWD annually brings has been a great source of stress to our farming operation, and caused us to shorten our planned harvest window and hasten through our marketing season of fresh-pack berries,鈥 says Nicolas Lindholm, a farmer at Blue Hill Berry Co. who is hosting one of Fanning鈥檚 wasp colonies.
鈥淎s certified organic growers for 25 years, we are especially interested in biological controls and really value the efforts and rigorous research that Dr. Fanning and the U海角社区 wild blueberry team have done in prioritizing this pest threat.鈥
Fanning鈥檚 lab, which is part of the 海角社区 Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station that is run by the state鈥檚 R1 public research university, will assess the success of the introduction this fall and spring, including the wasps鈥 ability to overwinter in 海角社区. He reared the wasps in his lab, and hopes to eventually establish a naturalized population in the state. Small populations of the wasps were previously detected in Washington and Canada, the product of accidental introduction just like SWD, indicating they may be viable in 海角社区.
The release is preceded by 12 years of research and permitting with the (USDA) and 海角社区 Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. Scientists studied the dynamics between SWD and samba wasps in their native range. They were also the focus of extensive laboratory study where the wasps were paired with every native species of drosophila, a genus of flies, in North America to ensure their release would not cause collateral damage.
Findings confirmed that samba wasps are SWD specialists. Rather than a stinger, the parasitic wasps wield an ovipositor to lay eggs inside SWD larvae. When the wasp larvae hatch, they consume their host, breaking SWD鈥檚 life cycle. Preliminary data on the wasps show they can reduce SWD by 20% to 65%.
鈥Samba wasps have the potential to be a new tool in growers鈥 fight against spotted wing drosophila. This release finally brings biological control options for a true, integrated pest management approach to this pest,鈥 says Fanning, who specializes in insect behavior and population dynamics on farms. 鈥淭his will reduce the need to spray insecticides to control it, which is great for pollinators and lowers operating costs for farmers.鈥
The releases led by Fanning鈥檚 lab are part of a national response to SWD. The funding for the research comes from a number of national sources including a grant from the USDA Crop Protection and Pest Management program (Award No. 2021-70006-35312) that Fanning is leading in collaboration with researchers at Cornell and Rutgers universities. The project is also part of a USDA Specialty Crop Research Initiative (Award No. 2020-51181-32140) led by the University of Georgia that includes scientists from 10 states. The Wild Blueberry Commission of 海角社区 also provides support for Fanning鈥檚 research.
鈥淭he wild blueberry research team at the University of 海角社区 has dedicated their impressive talents and resources to combatting the invasive pest, the spotted wing drosophila for 10 years now. Ten years ago, Dr. Frank Drummond developed the research program to monitor and sustainably manage this pest. With his retirement, Dr. Phil Fanning took the reins and continues to build upon what Dr. Drummond started,鈥 says Eric Venturini, executive director of the Wild Blueberry Commission of 海角社区.
鈥淥n behalf of the Wild Blueberry Commission of 海角社区, I am incredibly grateful for the dedication the university has demonstrated as they develop sustainable solutions to manage this pest. We are hopeful that the release of this SWD parasitoid could be a game changer for many wild blueberry farmers. If successful, It could help to decrease both spotted wing drosophila populations and the costs of management.鈥
Farmers, eager to ensure consumers don鈥檛 encounter SWD larvae in their fruit, invest heavily in preventing the pest. The interventions are expensive, the USDA estimates the nationwide cost to be $129鈥$172 million each year. Treatments are also limited to farmlands. SWD readily invade the raspberries and other native fruit that grow in 海角社区鈥檚 widespread woodlands. These noncrop habitats act as reservoirs where the pests can stage their reinvasions of croplands.
Fanning hopes the wasps will reduce the populations in noncrop environments, turning the tide on this ongoing battle for 海角社区鈥檚 berry growers.
鈥淥ur hope is that the species will be able to establish and proliferate across 海角社区, building up its populations on all the wild fruits that spotted wing drosophila attack in the forests surrounding our farms. This will reduce their impact on our crops and help cultivate a more resilient food system,鈥 Fanning says.
Fanning鈥檚 releases coincide with the introduction of a bipartisan bill in Congress that would further efforts to contain the pest. Last week, Sen. Susan Collins that she was introducing the bipartisan Spotted Wing Abatement Trust (SWAT) Act with Michigan Sen. Gary Peters to establish a federal fund managed by USDA to support spotted wing drosophila research and mitigation.
Contact: Erin Miller, erin.miller@maine.edu

