The Olive Fruit Fly only lays its eggs in olives. It can infest up to 90% of a farmer´s fruit, damaging the crops and the livelihoods of the olive growers and exporters. (Photo: FAO/IAEA). But despite being revered by kings and symbolising peace, this ancient tree is being attacked by Bactrocera oleae, more commonly known as the olive fruit fly.Maybe over time this technique could be used to replace pesticides...
This small, innocuous-looking pest, which only lays its eggs in olives, can infest up to 90% of a farmer´s fruit, damaging the crops and the livelihoods of the olive growers and exporters.
The fly poses a serious threat to the olive and olive oil industries in southern Europe, North Africa, the Middle East and the USA.
However, help could be at hand for farmers affected by these olive-eating pests in the form of nuclear technology.
Scientists from the Joint Division of the IAEA and the UN´s Food and Agriculture Organisation are working on a project to control the fly using the proven and environmentally-friendly Sterile Insect Technique (SIT), which uses radiation to sterilise pests.
This technique, also known as "birth control for insects", suppresses populations by breeding large numbers of sterile males. When released into the wild, they breed with females who in turn produce eggs that do not hatch.
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"Birth Control for Insects" Using Radiation
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This is certainly an interesting application of using radiation, via Nuclear Street:
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