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  • Priority Species: Spotted Wing Drosophila

    • Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office. Washington Invasive Species Council.

  • Regional Pest Alert: Spotted Wing Drosophila

  • Species Profile -- Spotted Wing Drosophila

    • Spotted wing drosophila

      Spotted wing drosophila was first discovered in Hawaii in the 1980's and in the continental U.S. in 2008. It was possibly introduced in fruits imported from Asia. This insect is a pest of unripe berries and stone fruits capable of causing significant economic losses.

  • Spotted Wing Drosophila

    • Oregon State University. College of Agricultural Sciences.

  • Spotted Wing Drosophila

    • Michigan State University. Integrated Pest Management Program.

    • The Spotted Wing Drosophila (SWD) is a vinegar fly of East Asian origin that can cause damage to many fruit crops. This small insect has been in Hawaii since the 1980s, was detected in California in 2008, spread through the West Coast in 2009, and was detected in Florida, Utah, the Carolinas, Wisconsin and Michigan for the first time in 2010. This website will be the central location for dissemination of information about this insect. Check back for updates. This team is also helping to coordinate research projects to understand how best to protect fruit from infestation by this new pest.

  • Spotted Wing Drosophila (Fruit Fly) Pest Alert

    • British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture.

  • Spotted Wing Drosophila in Home Gardens

    • University of Minnesota. Extension.

  • Spotted Wing Drosophila in Wisconsin

    • University of Wisconsin - Madison. Department of Entomology.

  • Spotted-Winged Drosophila

    • Plant Health Australia.

  • Sustainable Spotted Wing Drosophila Management

    • Sustainable Spotted Wing Drosophila Management.

    • A national team of scientists, with support from the USDA Specialty Crop Research Initiative, that seeks to advance the development of sustainable, integrated management strategies for spotted wing drosophila, SWD, based on biology.

  • The State of Integrated Pest Management for Spotted-Wing Drosophila

    • Sep 23, 2021
    • Entomological Society of America. Entomology Today.

    • Spotted-wing drosophila (Drosophila suzukii), is an invasive fruit fly species that causes about $500 million in economic damage to fruit crops in the U.S. each year. A native to southeast Asia, it arrived in the U.S. in Hawaii in the 1980s and in the continental U.S. in California in 2008. It is now widespread through many parts of the U.S. and the world. In a new review article published last week in the Journal of Economic Entomology, Vaughn Walton, Ph.D., of Oregon State University and a multi-university team of experts have created a comprehensive look at how SWD management strategies are evolving to address these challenges.

      The U.S. Department of Agriculture grant that funds part of Walton and colleagues SWD research stipulates that they work with industry influencers, and they have been doing this from the beginning. They bring technologies to industry and seek feedback on how well the technologies work in actual practice. "Federal funding is allowing us to listen to and serve our clients—the growers," Walton says. As the Journal of Economic Entomology paper details, many promising control strategies are being developed for this challenging and uniquely adaptable invasive species. With continued advances, researchers can hope that populations of SWD can be controlled and the damage they cause reduced.

  • TISI Inventory - Spotted Wing Drosophila

    • Texas State University System. Texas Invasive Species Institute.

  • UC Pest Management Guidelines - Spotted-Wing Drosophila

    • Jul 2018
    • University of California. Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program.

  • Utah Pests Fact Sheet - Spotted Wing Drosophila [PDF, 2.04 MB]

  • Vinegar Fly’s Lethal Sweet Tooth

    • Feb 2017
    • USDAARS. Agricultural Research Magazine.

    • A novel control strategy could be in store for spotted wing drosophila, an invasive vinegar fly species from Asia that attacks more than 100 fruit crops, including blueberry, cherry, blackberry, and grape. Two- to three-millimeters long, the spotted wing drosophila fly first drew attention in 2008 in California. Before long, it had spread to other western states, inflicting losses of 50 to 100 percent in berry crops there. Two years later, it had spread to the eastern United States, wreaking similar havoc and forcing growers to retaliate with intensive insecticide spraying. Researchers, meanwhile, began learning all they could about the invader. One such scientist is Blair Sampson, an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) entomologist who specializes in integrated pest management approaches for small-fruit crops. Sampson is with the ARS Thad Cochran Southern Horticultural Laboratory in Poplarville, Mississippi.

  • YouTube - Spotted Wing Drosophila in Small Fruits

    • Google. YouTube; Purdue Extension Entomology.