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One fly pollinates crops and eats pests at once

Li H, Wyckhuys KA, Wu K.

Pollinators

If you grow tomatoes, eggplant, or melons under any kind of cover, a single insect that both sets your fruit and controls aphids means fewer sprays and fewer separate interventions to manage.

Scientists tested a hoverfly called Episyrphus balteatus in greenhouses growing tomatoes, eggplant, and muskmelon, and found it does double duty: it pollinates flowers just as well as hand pollination or hormone sprays, and it eats aphids, the sap-sucking pests that plague these crops. Fruits pollinated by the hoverflies actually came out rounder and more nutrient-rich than those treated with hormones instead. It's a rare case of one small creature handling both jobs that farmers usually solve with separate chemicals or labor.

Key Findings

1

Fruit set rates exceeded 97% in tomato, muskmelon, and eggplant under hoverfly treatment

2

Aphid biological control efficacy reached 88% in muskmelon and 92% in eggplant at a 1:200 hoverfly-to-aphid ratio

3

Hoverfly-pollinated fruits were more symmetrical, rounder, and had higher nutrient content than hormone-treated fruits

chevron_right Technical Summary

One insect can do two jobs at once in the greenhouse: hoverflies pollinated tomato, eggplant, and muskmelon flowers at rates above 97% while also eating up to 92% of aphid pests, cutting the need for separate chemical treatments.

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Abstract Preview

Original paper

The role of the hoverfly (Episyrphus balteatus) in greenhouse vegetable production: contributions as a pollinator and aphid predator.

<h4>Background</h4>The hoverfly Episyrphus balteatus (Diptera: Syrphidae) contributes to crop pollination and biological control; however, these two essential ecosystem services are seldom jointly ...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Tomato, Eggplant, Muskmelon pollinators, crop-improvement, urban-ecology 5 related articles

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