How to Get Rid of Fruit Flies

AGN

New Lister
image.webp

Fruit flies are one of the major nuisance that alters with fruits and fresh vegetables. They are attracted by sugary or fermented scents.

Their cohabitation tends to result to infestations and contamination of the fruits. This necessitates the need to free our fruits from this hazardous risks resulting from the contamination.

Flies are vector to various types of infestations, and portrays unhygienic state within the surroundings or the environment.

So, what are Fruit Flies?’

The scientific name of fruit flies is Drosophila melanogaster. They are tiny insects, typically 2–4 mm in length, with red eyes and tan bodies. They have a lifespan of about 40–50 days under optimal conditions. They are likely to be found around ripe, decaying fruits, vegetables, and damp areas.

Dangers of Fruit Flies

Fruit flies are likely to result in;

Contamination of Food

Fruit flies lay eggs on decaying fruits, vegetables, and organic waste. The eggs hatch into larvae (maggots) that feed on the food, making it unfit for consumption. Even if you don't see larvae, fruit flies carry bacteria and microbes from one surface to another, potentially contaminating food.

Bacterial and Pathogen Spread

Fruit flies land on unsanitary surfaces like garbage bins, drains, or compost piles before landing on your food. This can spread harmful bacteria and pathogens. Consuming contaminated food can lead to foodborne illnesses, causing nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain.

Fungal Spread

Fruit flies are attracted to yeast and fungi, which grow on decaying fruits and damp areas. They can spread fungal spores, worsening mold and mildew problems in kitchens and pantries.

Allergy Triggers

Their body parts, saliva, or droppings can trigger allergic reactions in sensitive individuals. Symptoms may include sneezing, skin rashes, or itchy eyes

Rapid Infestation

Fruit flies reproduce extremely quickly: A single female can lay 500 eggs in her lifetime. Eggs hatch within 24–48 hours, leading to a sudden infestation. Large infestations can create a nuisance, impact food hygiene, and stress household or restaurant environments.

Methods of Getting Rid of Fruit Flies

As fruit flies infestation has grown, there have been development of various methods to compact this upsurge. Some of these various methods to achieve a fruit free fly’s environment includes;

Conserve cleanliness;

Fruit flies as they are largely attracted by scents such as fermenting fruits, it is considerate

For proper discarding fermenting or overripe fruits to minimize attraction. In case of overripe fruits, it is wise to store the fruits in a refrigerator or use airtight container.

Proper storage to prevent access;

This is storage of fruits in a place where this flies cannot access such as refrigerator, screen windows, meshwork covered, which will limit them from contaminating the fruits.

Scenery of traps;

Traps provides sites of attractions for bleeding through fruity scents to mimic their sites of attraction or bleeding. Flies are lured to the trap so as they cannot escape.

Application of repellant sprays

In situations where there are severe infestations of these flies, application of repellant maybe applicable to compact the hazardous infestations, and transmissions.

This method is not highly recommended unless there is severe and threatening infestations. This may be achieved through processes such as fumigation, application of natural oils example eucalyptus.

Benefits of getting rid of Fruit flies

Reduce health hazardous;


In cases where these flies have infested they inclines the consumers to variety of contingency of infections. This results to immune suppression and can result to serious life threatening conditions. Fruit flies are vectors to various infections such as Salmonella, E.coli in which this results to gastrointestinal illnesses.

Encourages better food safety

Through continuous habits of safe storage of fruits, it grades to an overall general safe food hygiene. This will improve healthy living and and virtuous food handling.

Promotes pleasing environment

When an environment is free from flies, it is pleasing, and comfortable for dinning and cooking. It is also portraying a state of good hygiene within the area.

Getting rid of fruit flies is required to proactively improve hygiene safety, improve health standards and provide comfortable environment for dinning and kitchen.

This is achieved through use of traps, maintaining cleanliness, proper storage to prevent access and use of repellants.

These methods will ensure that there is total purging of infestations from these fruit flies and improve quality health standards.

It’s also recommendable in order to have a fruit fly’s free environment that we;

1) Dispose of overripe and fermented fruits well to reduce the rate of scent attraction to these flies.

2) Use of repellants such as fumigations in case of severe infestation as it can result to more severe compromised infestations or transmissions.

3)Proper storage of this fruits free from access to this fruit flies.
 
Kumbe a neighbour burning up wet eucalyptus chippings under his mango tree was in the know of how to deter fruit flies.
 
Fermentation produces carbon dioxide. Does sugar smell if it is not activated (actually digested) by yeast?
Sweet, sugary smell means the fruity smell associated with fruits that contain sugars. This is almost every fruit you could think of. Fruit flies react majorly to sugary smells and only in a few instances to carbon dioxide.
 
Sweet, sugary smell means the fruity smell associated with fruits that contain sugars. This is almost every fruit you could think of. Fruit flies react majorly to sugary smells and only in a few instances to carbon dioxide.
This here is an effective fruit fly and mosquito trap in my garden I made two days ago. The bait is household sugar, baking (dry) yeast in a little water. If you can zoom you'll see a layer of dead flies that started dying on the second day after fermentation had kicked in. No fruit.
Fruits have evolved to produce the aroma when they ripen to attract eaters for seed dispersal.

IMG20241217143529.webp
 
No fruit.
Sugar contains the same 'sugars' you will find in fruits. So, it is technically a fruit equivalent. The attraction to fermentation is primarily due to the alcohol, acetic acid (vinegar), and the sugary smell. If you placed fruits against CO2, the fruits will attract 99% of the flies. So, CO2 is an exceedingly minor attractant of fruit flies.
 
Sugar contains the same 'sugars' you will find in fruits.
But not the fruity aroma?

Anyway, when I was researching on how to make the above trap - primarily to kill those painful and itcheous black and white mosquitoes that emerge in the late afternoon, I learnt that they are attracted by the carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is what directs the squitoes to living animals from which they get their blood meal.

Noticed my mosquito trap works even with fruit flies. I rest.
 
But not the fruity aroma?

Anyway, when I was researching on how to make the above trap - primarily to kill those painful and itcheous black and white mosquitoes that emerge in the late afternoon, I learnt that they are attracted by the carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is what directs the squitoes to living animals from which they get their blood meal.

Noticed my mosquito trap works even with fruit flies. I rest.
Fruit flies associate the fruity aroma with the availability of food, same as mosquitos associate carbon dioxide with a possible blood meal. So, most likely the fruit flies you nabbed were after the sugar and its ferments, which means you got two targets with one stone.
And if you nabbed a mosquito before the sugar fermented, it was likely feeding on the sugar.
 
Back
Top