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| ORIENTAL FRUIT FLY   Dacus dorsalis
  Hendel -- Diptera, Tephritidae   (Contacts)     ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge &
  search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases     
          The Hawaiian
  Territorial Board of Agriculture and Forestry initiated explorations for
  natural enemies in 1947-8 in the Philippines and Malaysia.  Although it was impossible to ascertain
  the identity of the parasitoids being imported, it is apparent that the
  success obtained was due to the importations made at this time.  Thus, in 1948-9 other interested
  organizations joined into a cooperative effort, including the USDA, the
  University of California, The Hawaiian Agricultural Experiment Station, the
  Hawaiian Sugar Planters Experiment Station and the Pineapple Research
  Institute.  By 1951, fourteen
  explorers collected parasitoids from many fruit fly species in most of the
  tropical and subtropical areas of the world including especially the
  Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, Borneo, India, Sri Lanka, Australia,
  New Caledonia, Fiji, South Africa, Kenya, Congo, Brazil and Mexico.  Shipments were mostly of parasitized
  puparia sent by airmail or air freight and usually reached Hawaii in seven
  days or less from any given area. 
  There were more than 4,246,000 fly puparia of over 60 species sent to
  Hawaii.  About 1/3rd of these were Dacus dorsalis.  About 80
  species of parasitoids were obtained, of which at least 16 larval parasitoids
  of the genus Opius, six
  pupal parasitoids and one predator were cultured and released in the
  field.  Recovery was made of 11
  species initially, but one species became dominant.          DeBach (1974)
  relates that the story is somewhat confused because various of the imported
  species of Opius were very
  similar in appearance and some were misidentified initially.  Therefore, the original material received
  from the Philippines in 1947 contained the three most important of all the
  parasitoids eventually imported, but only one of these, Opius longicaudatus
  (Ashmead) was correctly identified. 
  The other two, Opius vandenboschi Fullaway and Opius oophilus Fullaway were thought to be one species.  Opius
  persulcatus (Silvestri),
  which actually was never present.  The
  same applied to the next group of shipments received from Malaysia in
  1948.  Parasitoids from these
  shipments became readily established. 
  Opius longicaudatus increased rapidly
  in the field after its initial release on Oahu in 1948 but suddenly lost its
  dominant position during the latter half of 1948 to O. vandenboschi
  which had been released initially about the same time.  Later O.
  vandenboschi was replaced by
  O. oophilus which had first been recognized to be established
  in 1949.  In spite of the competition
  between these three species, each replacement of one by another was
  accompanied by a higher total parasitism and a greater reduction in the fruit
  fly infestation (DeBach 1974).  Both O. longicaudatus and O.
  vandenboschi had virtually disappeared
  by 1951 and this status has since continued. 
            The final result
  has been a very substantial reduction in the Oriental fruit fly populations
  in all of the Islands estimated to be on the order of 95% as compared to the
  1947-9 peak abundance.  At that time
  practically 100% of most kinds of fruits were infested.  The threat of movement to the mainland has
  been greatly reduced.  Still, some
  preferred fruit such as guava and mangoes, which up to 1949 were 100%
  infested, are sometimes infested to ca. 50%, but with many fewer larvae per
  fruit.  Yet on the average less than
  10% of the mangoes are now infested, and many kinds of fruits that were once
  heavily infested are not practically free of attack (DeBach 1974).          DeBach (1974)
  stated that this project illustrates the basic importance of accurate
  knowledge of both taxonomy and biology to biological control.  Opius
  oophilus was mistaken for
  some time as O. persulcatus.  Had the latter been imported and
  established early with some degree of success, it is possible that further
  work, including the final discovery of the best parasitoid, O. oophilus, might have been dropped.  Interestingly, O. oophilus
  has also turned out to be the best parasitoid of the Mediterranean fruit fly
  in Hawaii, having displaced O.
  tryoni (Cameron), which
  previously was well established and moderately effective.  Had O.
  oophilus been recognized as
  a valid species and introduced from Malaysia in 1913-14 when importation of
  parasitoids of the Mediterranean fruit fly was being conducted, greater
  biological control would have occurred 40 years earlier.            Opius oophilus
  attacks eggs and O. longicaudatus and O. vandenboschi attack host larvae.  The former lays its eggs in an egg of the host, then completes
  development in the host larva.  Had
  this habit been known in 1935-6 when F. C. Hadden probably imported O. oophilus along with other Opius species from Malaysia and India for control of the
  Mediterranean fruit fly, it probably could have been cultured and
  established.  But insectary propagation
  did not occur, probably because its habit of ovipositing only in host eggs
  was not then known and also only host larvae were provided during culture
  attempts.  If the biology had been
  understood so that the parasitoid had become established on the Mediterranean
  fruit fly at that time, it not only would have provided better biological
  control of that fruit fly from 1936 to 1950 (when O. oophilus
  finally was established), but it would have been present to attack the
  Oriental fruit fly when it first reached Hawaii in 195 and might have made
  the later massive and expensive project unnecessary (Bess & Haramoto
  1958, Clausen et al. 1965, DeBach 1974).         
  For additional details of biological control effort and biologies of
  host and natural enemies, please also refer to the following (Silvestri 1914,
  Noble 1942, van den Bosch & Haramoto, 1951, 1953; van den Bosch et al.
  1951, Clancy et al. 1952, Dresner 1953, Fullaway 1953, Hagen 1953, Peterson
  1957, Christenson & Foote 1960, Bess & Haramoto 1961, Bess et al.
  1961, 1963).     REFERENCES:          [Additional references may be found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]   Bess, H. A. & F. H. Haramoto.  1958.  Biological
  control of the oriental fruit fly in Hawaii. 
  Proc. 10th Intern. Cong. Ent. (1956)4:  835-40.   Bess, H. A. & F. H. Haramoto.  1961.  Contributions to
  the biology and ecology of the Oriental fruit fly, Dacus dorsalis
  Hendel (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Hawaii. 
  Hawaii Agric. Expt. Sta. Tech. Bull. 44:  30 p.   Bess, H. A., R. van den Bosch & F. H.
  Haramoto.  1961. 
  Fruit fly parasites and their activities in Hawaii.  Hawaii. Ent. Soc. Proc. 17:  367-68.   Bess, H. A., F. H. Haramoto & A. D. Hinckley.  1963. 
  Population studies of the Oriental fruit fly, Dacus dorsalis
  Hendel (Diptera: Tephritidae). 
  Ecology 44:  197-201.   Christenson, L. D. & R. H. Foote.  1960.  Biology of fruit
  flies.  Ann. Rev. Ent. 5:  171-92.   Clancy, D. W., P. E. Marucci & H. Dresner.  1952. 
  Importation of natural enemies to control the Oriental fruit fly in
  Hawaii.  J. Econ.
  Ent. 45:  85-90.   Clausen, C. P., D. W. Clancy & Q. C. Chock.  1965. 
  Biological control of the oriental fly (Dacus dorsalis
  Hendel) and other fruit flies in Hawaii. 
  U. S. Dept. Agric. Tech. Bull. 1322. 
  102 p.   DeBach, P. 
  1974.  Biological Control by Natural Enemies.  Cambridge University Press, London &
  New York.  323 p.   Dresner, E. 
  1953.  Observations on the biology and habits of
  pupal parasites of the Oriental fruit fly. 
  Hawaii. Ent. Soc. Proc. 15: 
  299-310.   Fullaway, D. T. 
  1953.  The Oriental fruit fly (Dacus dorsalis Hendel) in Hawaii.  7th Pacific Sci. Cong. Proc. 4:  148-63.   Hagen, K. S.  1953.  A premating period in certain species of
  the genus Opius
  (Hymenoptera: Braconidae).  Hawaii.
  Ent. Soc. Proc. 15:  115-16.   Newell, I. M. & F. H. Haramoto.  1968.  Biotic factors
  influencing populations of Dacus
  dorsalis in Hawaii.  Proc. Hawaiian Entomol. Soc. 20:  81-139.   Noble, N. S.  1942.  Melittobia
  (Syntomosphyrum indicum) (Silv.) (Hymenoptera,
  Chalcidoidea), a parasite of the Queensland fruit fly, Strumeta tryoni
  (Frogg.).  Linn. Soc. New South Wales,
  Proc. 67:  269-76.   Peterson, G. D., Jr. 
  1957.  An annotated check list
  of parasites and predators introduced into Guam during the years
  1950-1955.  Hawaii. Ent. Soc. Proc.
  16:  199-202.   Silvestri, F.  1914.  Report of an expedition to Africa in
  search of the natural enemies of fruit flies (Trypaneidae).  Hawaii Bd. Agric. Forestry, Div. Ent.
  Bull. 3.  176 p.   van den Bosch, R & F. H. Haramoto.  1951.  Opius oophilis Fullaway, an egg-larval parasite of the Oriental
  fruit fly discovered in Hawaii. 
  Hawaiian Ent. Soc. Proc. 14: 
  251-55.   van den Bosch, R, H. A. Bess & F. H.
  Haramoto.  1951. 
  Status of Oriental fruit fly parasites in Hawaii.  J. Econ. Ent. 44:  753-59.     |