The cherry fruit fly is a serious pest for cherries. The tiny insect lays eggs on ripening cherries, causing the fruit to turn brown, shrivel up, and become rotten.

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Appearance:

  • Adult flies are mostly black with yellow to orange heads, and a large yellow dot is visible on their back.

  • Larva: Cream-colored, legless maggot with a tapered head and rounded tail

  • Pupae: light to dark brown and shaped like a large grain of wheat


Damage:

  • Peak emergence of adults and infestation of fruit occurs from mid-June to mid-July.

  • Damage occurs from the larva developing inside fruit and feeding on the flesh. The result is “wormy” fruit that is unusable.

  • Fruit will develop dark spots and may appear wilted or shriveled.

  • As the mature larvae emerge from the fruit, they may leave behind visible exit holes in the cherries.


Control & Treatment:

  • Hang sticky sphere traps and/or yellow card sticky traps in tree

  • Consider adding a “Feeding attractant” to the sticky sphere traps

  • Pick up early fruit drops biweekly to prevent larvae from entering the ground to pupate

  • Spraying the ground beneath an infected tree in fall with Beauveria bassiana – this fungus consumes the fly pupae

  • Use a trap tree such as a Dolgo Crabapple on the perimeter of the orchard.

  • Apply beneficial nematodes under the tree in early fall, which seek out the fruit fly pupae.

Sources: Utah State University Extension, USDA Dept. of Agriculture, Michael Phillips, “The Holistic Orchard”, and Patrick L. Byers, Horticulture Specialist