journal article Apr 01, 2018

Identification of new pests likely to be introduced into Europe with the fruit trade

EPPO Bulletin Vol. 48 No. 1 pp. 144-154 · Wiley
View at Publisher Save 10.1111/epp.12462
Abstract
Global trade of plants and plant products facilitates the international movement of pests. The introduction of new pests in an area may have huge economic consequences for local plant production, and should be avoided. The European Union (EU) imports large quantities of fresh fruit from all over the world, which could be a pathway for exotic pests. This review aimed to identify pests not yet present or regulated in the EU that may enter the territory with the fruit trade and damage fruit production in Europe. Pests of Vaccinium (blueberry), apple, grape, orange and mandarin were screened to assess the likelihood of their being associated with these fruit, their impact, their geographical distribution, whether they are intercepted in trade and whether they are spreading or emerging. They were further ranked to produce alert lists of 30 to 36 pests for each fruit species. These lists are presented as well as other findings on contaminants and newly introduced pests. Datasheets on those pests were prepared and are available as supporting information to this article as well as in the EPPO Global Database (https://gd.eppo.int/). This work within the EU project DROPSA aimed to raise the awareness of importers and regulatory authorities to the potential risk of introducing pests with the fruit trade.
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References
Details
Published
Apr 01, 2018
Vol/Issue
48(1)
Pages
144-154
License
View
Funding
European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration Award: 613678
Cite This Article
M. Suffert, A. Wilstermann, F. Petter, et al. (2018). Identification of new pests likely to be introduced into Europe with the fruit trade. EPPO Bulletin, 48(1), 144-154. https://doi.org/10.1111/epp.12462