
Company Gets a License to Dye Fruit FliesBy Jim De Quattro February 19, 1998USDA's Agricultural Research Servicehas issued a license for technology using a bait to trick fruit fly pests into
consuming a red dye that quickly kills them once they are exposed to light. The
dye destroys the insects' cells. ARS issued an exclusive license for the bait-dye technology to PhotoDye
International, Inc., Baltimore, Md. ARS scientists refined and tested the
bait-dye product, SureDye, under cooperative R&D agreements with PhotoDye
since 1995. Among other uses, SureDye shows promise as an alternative to malathion
sometimes used to suppress fruit-fly invasions such as one by Mediterranean
fruit flies in Florida last year. SureDye has been shown effective in aerial-
and ground-applied sprays. Other methods including bait stations and spot sprays
are being developed. The Food and Drug Administration years
ago approved the red dye, D&C Red No. 28, for drug and cosmetic uses such as
antacids and lipsticks. The bait doesn't attract honeybees, ladybugs and other beneficial bugs. But
its precise combinations of sugars, proteins and other ingredients attract fruit
flies and stimulate them to feed. They quickly ingest a minuscule but toxic dose
of dye. Sunlight speeds its action. SureDye killed up to 100 percent of fruit fly pests in lab and field tests
led by ARS entomologist Robert Mangan in Weslaco, Texas, and colleagues in Hilo,
Hawaii. ARS, PhotoDye and other cooperators have tested SureDye outdoors in
California, Florida, Hawaii and Texas as well as Brazil, Guatemala, Mexico,
Morocco, South Africa and Surinam. Outdoor trials have been in citrus, mango,
carambola and other tropical and subtropical crops. Targets have included
Mediterranean, Mexican, Caribbean, carambola, oriental and other crop-damaging
fruit flies. More tests are being planned. PhotoDye has applied to the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency to register SureDye as a commercial
fruit-fly insecticide. Meanwhile, ARS scientists are exploring using
light-activated dye against other pests including temperate-zone fruit flies,
household ants, Colorado potato beetles and corn rootworms. Scientific contacts: Robert Mangan, ARS
Subtropical Agricultural Research Center,
Weslaco, Texas, phone (956) 565-2647, fax (956) 565-6652,
[email protected]; Steven Peck or
Paul Moore, ARS Tropical
Fruit, Vegetable and Ornamental Crop Research Laboratory, Hilo, Hawaii,
phone (808) 959-4300, fax (808) 959-4323, [email protected](Peck) or [email protected](Moore). Story contacts Robert L Mangan Paul H Moore U.S. Department of Agriculture | |