Whangarei Queensland fruit fly update
Situation update 6 - 9 April 2014
• No fruit flies detected in traps from Zone A or B, or in fruit collected and examined from Controlled Area
properties.
•
• Traps in Zone A are cleared daily and traps in Zone B are cleared and examined every three days. The first
results from the Zone B traps came in last night and there were no fruit flies found.
•
• MPI will release a regular update late morning each day reporting the previous day’s trapping results, unless
there is a significant development which would prompt earlier advice.
•
• This will be the last update sent directly to media outlets. The updates will continue to be posted on the fruit
fly web page each morning by 11am. Visit: http://www.biosecurity.govt.nz/pests/queensland-fruit-fly
•
• 51 staff are out in the field today, clearing traps and disposal bins and collecting fruit for sampling.
•
• Restrictions remain in place on the movement of fruit and some vegetables out of a defined Controlled Area
around where the single male Queensland fruit fly was found on April 1. The Controlled Area is a circular zone extending
1.5km from the location of the fly find in Parihaka and takes in areas of Parihaka, Riverside and central Whangarei.
•
• Whole fruit and vegetables (except for leafy and root vegetables) cannot be moved out of the Controlled Area,
although fruit and veges can be carried into the Area.
•
• The restrictions are an important precaution while MPI investigates whether any further flies are present. If
there are undetected flies out there, the measures will help prevent their spread out of the area.
•
• The Whangarei Countdown supermarket in Okara Drive and the PAK’nSAVE Supermarket in Walton Street are outside
the Controlled Area and sales of fruit and vegetables continue as usual.
•
• MPI asks that people who have bought fruit and vegetables outside the Controlled Area (for example in these
supermarkets or the weekly local farmers market), but need to travel through this area, ensure the produce is in plastic
bags for the journey.
•
• Full information about the Controlled Area and the restrictions, including maps and full instructions is at: www.mpi.govt.nz – follow the fruit fly button.
•
• MPI is running an extensive response trapping network, as set out in an internationally- validated standard, to
lure any fruit flies that may be present. Gardens and rubbish bins in the Controlled Area are being inspected for any
signs of fruit flies.
•
• The Controlled Area comprises two zones – Zone A extends 200m from the site of the detection and Zone B goes
from that 200m boundary out to 1500m.
•
• There are now 118 response traps in Zone A and 200 response traps in Zone B. The original fruit fly was found in
a surveillance trap that is part of MPI’s national surveillance programme. There are 13 of these routine surveillance
traps in the Controlled Area.
•
• Residents in the Controlled Area have been advised to dispose of all fruit and vegetable waste through in-sink
waste disposal units (where they have them) or in bins provided by MPI. There are 222 of these MPI disposal bins in the
Controlled Area and at other high-risk sites. MPI is emptying the bins and safely disposing of the material.
•
• MPI has field laboratory facilities in place examining fruit collected from gardens in the Controlled Area and
also to identify any suspect insects collected. Again, no further fruit flies have been found.
ends