Farm Progress

Fruit removal for EGVM in Solano County, Calif.

The California Department of Food and Agriculture will remove fruit from backyard grapevines in a portion of the Fairfield area in Solano County to help eradicate the European grapevine moth (EGVM).  

September 7, 2010

2 Min Read

The California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) is preparing to remove the fruit from backyard grapevines in a portion of the Fairfield area in Solano County as part of the ongoing effort to eradicate the European grapevine moth (EGVM). 

CDFA’s first choice for treatment is fruit removal from backyard grapevines within 400 meters of where an EGVM was found.

If property owners would prefer, the second choice is ground treatment with the organic compound Bt (bacillus thuringiensis), a naturally-occurring extract from bacteria. Either option will help to eradicate EGVM on the properties and greatly reduce the risk of spread to commercial vineyards.

The fruit removal option was recommended by a technical working group appointed by the USDA consisting of scientists and specialists working with this type of pest.

Approximately 900 properties are within the designated treatment areas. Some contain grapevines, which are the only EGVM host plant that will be treated.

Fruit removal activities are scheduled to begin during the week of Sept. 13. 

An informational open house to discuss the program is scheduled for 6-8 p.m. on Sept. 9 at the Fairfield Civic Library’s Becker-Balmer meeting room, 1150 Kentucky Street.

The European grapevine moth has been detected in eight California counties: Fresno, Merced, Monterey, Napa, San Joaquin, Sonoma, Solano, and Mendocino.

The pest is known to occur in southern Asia, Japan, Europe, North Africa, Anatolia, the Caucasus, and in South America.

It primarily damages grapes, but has also been known to feed on other crops and plants.

The EGVM larvae, not the adult moths, are responsible for the damage to grapes. Larvae that emerge early in the spring feed on grape bud clusters or flowers and spin webbing around them before pupating inside the web or under a rolled leaf.  If heavy flower damage occurs during this first generation, the affected flowers will fail to develop and yield will be reduced. 

Second-generation larvae chew into the grapes to feed before pupating in the clusters or in leaves. 

Larvae of the third generation - the most damaging - feed on multiple ripening grapes and expose them to further damage from fungal development and rot. These larvae overwinter as pupae in protected areas such as under bark, and emerge as adults the following spring. 

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