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| MELON FLY   Dacus cucurbitae
  Coquillett -- Diptera, Tephritidae (Contacts)   ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge &
  search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases   
          Because
  melons and other perishable crops are available in the field for only a short
  period, these plants form an unstable resource to which the biology and life
  cycle of D. cucurbitae are well
  adapted.  Consequently, parasitoids of
  the fly must be able to follow the short-lived and localized fly populations
  throughout their range if efficient control is to be achieved.  In Hawaii, control had been possible
  because the presence of Momordica
  balsamina, the fruits of
  which constituted a stable wild host for D.
  cucurbitae and its
  parasitoids.  Changes in agricultural
  practices and increased land use, however, reduced the areas where M. balsamina grew abundantly, thereby reducing the reservoirs
  of the natural enemies and making it more difficult for the natural enemies
  to reach the cultivated fields.  The
  main fly population now had its origin in culti9vated fruits where
  parasitization was much lower than in the fruits of M. balsamina:  1% for tomatoes, 0-16.5% for melons, and
  0.2-6.5% for cucumbers vs. 20-37.8% for M.
  balsamina (Nishida
  1955).  Thus, a change in the
  diversity of the habitat proved detrimental to this biological control
  project (Kogan et al. 1999).          Please
  refer to the following for greater detail on biological control effort, and
  biologies of host and natural enemies (Back & Pemberton 1917, Willard
  1920, Yashiro 1936, Hutson 1939, McBride & Tanada 1949, Nishida &
  Haramoto 1953, Clausen 1956, Nishida & Bess 1957, Clausen et al. 1965).     REFERENCES:         [Additional references may be
  found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]   Back, E. A. & C. E. Pemberton.  1917. 
  The melon fly in Hawaii.  U. S.
  Dept. Agric. Bull. 491.  64 p.   Clausen, C.
  P.  1956.  Biological control
  of fruit flies.  J. Econ.
  Ent. 49:  766-68.   Clausen, C.
  P.  1978.  Introduced
  Parasites and Predators of Arthropod Pests and Weeds:  A World Review.  U. S. Dept. Agric., Agric. Handbk. 480.  545 p.   Clausen, C. P., D. W. Clancy & Q. C.
  Chock.  1965.  Biological control of the Oriental fruit
  fly (Dacus dorsalis Hendel) and other
  fruit flies in Hawaii.  U. S. Dept.
  Agric. Tech. Bull. 1322.  102p.   Fullaway, D. T.  1920.  The melon
  fly:  its control in Hawaii by a
  parasite introduced from India. 
  Hawaii For. Agric. 17:  101-105.   Hutson, J.
  C.  1939a.  Report on the work
  of the entomological division.  Ceylon
  Dir. Agric. Admin. Rept., 1937. p. D37-D42   Hutson, J.
  C.  1939b.  Report on the work
  of the entomological division.  Ceylon
  Dir. Agric. Admin. Rept., 1938. p. D36-D41   Kogan, M., D. Gerling & J. V. Maddox.  1999. 
  Enhancement of Biological Control in Transient Agricultural
  Environments.  In:  Bellows, T. S.
  & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Handbook of
  Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, New York.  1046 p.   McBride, O.
  C. & Y. Tanada.  1949.  A
  revised list of host plants of the melon fly in Hawaii.  Hawaii. Ent. Soc. Proc. 13:  411-21.   Newell, I. M., W. C. Mitchell & F. L.
  Rathburn.  1952.  Infestation norms for Dacus cucurbitae
  in Momordica balsamina, and seasonal
  differences in activity of the parasite Opius
  fletcheri.  Proc. Hawaii Ent. Soc. 14:  497-508.   Nishida, T. 
  1955.  Natural enemies of the
  melon fly, Dacus cucurbitae Coq. in Hawaii.  Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 48:  171-78.   Nishida, T.
  & H. A. Bess.  1950. 
  Applied ecology in melon fly control. 
  J. Econ. Ent. 43:  877-83.   Nishida, T.
  & H. A. Bess.  1957. 
  Studies on the ecology and control of the melon fly Dacus (Strumeta) cucurbitae
  Coquillett (Diptera: Tephritidae). 
  Hawaii Agric. Expt. Sta. Tech. Bull. 
  44 p.   Nishida, T.
  & F. Haramoto.  1953. 
  Immunity of Dacus cucurbitae to attack by certain
  parasites of Dacus dorsalis.  J. Econ. Ent. 46:  61-4.   Willard, H. F. 
  1920.  Opius fletcheri
  as a parasite of the melon fly in Hawaii.  J. Agric. Res. 20: 
  423-38.   Yashiro, H. 
  1936.  Outline of the work of
  establishing Opius fletcheri Silv. in Ishigaki
  Island, Loochoo.  Nojikairyoshiryo
  109:  149-52.  [in Japanese].     |