Pesticide and Environmental Update
New
Quarantine Treatment on Tap to Zap Fruit Storage Pests
Fruit-loving insects beware: A technology called CATTS, short for “Controlled
Atmosphere/Temperature Treatment System,” may soon be coming to a fruit
packinghouse near you. When that happens, fruit packers will be using this
pesticide-free technology to kill insects infesting apples, peaches,
pears, cherries, or nectarines destined for foreign markets.
An approach first conceptualized by scientists in the 1930s—but
technologically realized for today’s fruit packers by ARS entomologist
Lisa G. Neven and colleagues—CATTS rids stored fruit of live codling
moths, oriental fruit moths, and certain other insect pests by exposing
them to a lethal combination of rising temperature and mixtures of low
oxygen and high carbon dioxide levels.
Methyl bromide fumigation has been a chief means of disin-festing
export-bound fruit. But the chemical is expensive, costing about $10 a
pound, and all but exempted uses are prohibited in the United States
because of environmental and other concerns.
Since 1995, Neven has worked to position CATTS as an affordable,
nonpolluting methyl bromide alternative that can be incorporated into
commercial packinghouse operations and quarantine facilities.
Done correctly, the treatment causes no significant change to the
fruits’ appearance, texture, taste, or aroma, says Neven, who is in the
ARS Fruit and Vegetable Insect Research Unit, Wapato, Washington. Indeed,
in tests, CATTS-treated peaches and nectarines maintained their quality
for longer in storage than methyl bromide-fumigated fruit.
“It’s a matter of physiology, pure and simple,” explains Neven of
CATTS’s effect. “It mimics what the fruit experiences in the field—we
just crank it up a little bit. But the insects’ metabolism can’t
adjust to these changes.”
Neven has completed the last of three confirmatory tests on CATTS’s
ability to kill codling moths in organic apples. ARS will present the
results to its sister agency, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, for approval as a quarantine pest-control measure. To qualify for
such certification, and ultimately win the confidence of a major trade
partner such as Japan, CATTS fruit treatments must be 100 percent
effective at killing the insects.
Besides apples—and sweet cherries from earlier research—“I have
completed confirmatory tests against codling moths in peaches and
nectarines using two CATTS treatment regimens,” reports Neven. “We
also completed two efficacy tests against oriental fruit moths using the
same treatments.” She also ran efficacy tests against the pests in
apples using a commercial CATTS unit operated by Pac Organic Fruit, an
organic packinghouse in George, Washington. Her collaborators are Stephen
Drake, in ARS’s Physiology and Pathology of Tree Fruits Research Unit,
Wenatchee, Washington; David Obenland in ARS’s Commodity Protection and
Quality Research Unit, Parlier, California; Elizabeth Mitcham at the
University of California-Davis; Harold Ostenson of Pac Organic; and Dan
Black, of Techni-Systems, who engineered the CATTS machines in Chelan,
Washington.
The scientists’ Washington State-California collaboration is as much
a pooling of resources and expertise as it is a matter of economics: The
two states, along with Florida, produce the lion’s share of America’s
$9 billion fruit crop (figure excludes citrus). California is the top
fruit producer of the three and also leads the nation in agricultural
exports.
The importance of such international trade means that packers and
packer-grower cooperatives must take special care in making sure their
shipments are pest free. Otherwise, an importing country where a
particular insect pest doesn’t already occur may reject the shipment or
declare an all-out ban on further shipments.
Codling moths are a familiar foe to growers. And consumers know them as
the proverbial “worm in the apple.” After emerging from its egg, a
codling moth caterpillar bores to the core of an apple to feed and
develop. It then exits to pupate, leaving behind a damaged apple that’s
often unfit for sale.
Two generations of codling moths can emerge to plague apples during the
Washington State growing season—one in spring, the other in summer—and
three or four generations in warmer climates, like California. Pesticide
use, pheromone-assisted mating disruption, and insect parasitism and
predation can all inflict a heavy toll on this orchard pest’s numbers,
but some can still find their way into harvested apples. Neven envisions
CATTS being most effective in mopping up those stragglers. “You can
bring the fruit straight in from the field and subject it to the
treatment,” she says.
In studies, her group tried many combinations of temperature,
incremental heating rates, and O2-CO2 blends before settling on two
optimal treatments to disinfest fruit. The one incrementally heats fruit
to a core temperature of 44°C over 4 hours; the other heats it to 46°C
over 3 hours. Both use a 1 percent O2/15 percent CO2 atmosphere. The fruit
is then cooled before storage and shipping. Neven says these treatments
can be fine-tuned to accommodate different cultivars or packing regimens,
such as storing fruit in bins versus pallets.
Using Pac Organic’s CATTS unit, “We’ve demonstrated that we can
treat packed boxes of peaches and nectarines,” says Neven. Now, in
collaboration with the California Tree Fruit Agreement, Neven and Obenland
are exploring ways to treat pallet-stored fruit, further preparing the
technology for commercial use.—By Jan Suszkiw, Agricultural Research
Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Methyl Bromide Alternatives, an ARS National
Program (#308) described on the World Wide Web at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Lisa G. Neven is in the USDA-ARS Fruit and Vegetable Insect Research
Unit, 5230 Konnowac Pass Rd., Wapato, WA 98951; phone (509) 454-6556, fax
(509) 454-5646
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