U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents intercepted "rare and potentially destructive" fruit fly larvae from the Detroit Metro Airport that could have had a detrimental impact on agriculture if ...
An environmentally conscious biotechnologist in Kazakhstan has raised an army of trash-eating black soldier flies to help clean up the country's struggling waste management industry. In Kazakhstan ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture Entomology Laboratory confirmed that larvae were caper fruit flies, which belong to the Mediterranean fruit fly, Oriental fruit fly, melon fly, and Mexican fruit ...
21 news release. Agriculture officials identified the larvae as a caper fruit fly, according to the release. This species of fruit fly is “rare and potentially destructive” to American ...
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers at Detroit Metro Airport found live larvae of a rare fruit fly in a traveler's things earlier this year, officials said Thursday. They said the grubs ...
Be sure of your identification when picking wild plants ... making them a nutritionally rich feeding choice. These are black soldier fly larvae that can be fed live and stored in the fridge.