Animalia > Arthropoda > Insecta > Diptera > Tephritidae > Rhagoletis > Rhagoletis mendax

Rhagoletis mendax (blueberry maggot)

Wikipedia Abstract

Rhagoletis mendax is a species of tephritid fruit fly known by the common name blueberry maggot. It is a major pest of blueberry crops in the eastern and southern United States and eastern Canada. It attacks several species of blueberry and related plants. The larva is 5 to 8 millimeters long and white with tiny black mouthparts. The adult fly is slightly smaller, and mostly black in color with white stripes, orange-red eyes, and black-banded wings. The fly is destructive to fruit when it is a larva. The adult female fly lays a single egg in a blueberry, and when the larva hatches it consumes the fruit, usually finishing the entire berry in under three weeks. The larva then falls into the soil and pupates. Adult flies emerge, mate, and oviposit when blueberry plants are producing fruit. Ea
View Wikipedia Record: Rhagoletis mendax

Prey / Diet

Consumers

Parasitized by 
Diachasmimorpha mellea[2]

External References

NatureServe Explorer

Citations

Attributes / relations provided by
1Rhagoletis mendax Curran (Insecta: Diptera: Tephritidae), G.J. Steck, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry, and J.A. Payne, USDA-ARS, Southeastern Fruit and Nut Research Laboratory, July 1998
2Jorrit H. Poelen, James D. Simons and Chris J. Mungall. (2014). Global Biotic Interactions: An open infrastructure to share and analyze species-interaction datasets. Ecological Informatics.
Abstract provided by DBpedia licensed under a Creative Commons License
Species taxanomy provided by GBIF Secretariat (2022). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei accessed via GBIF.org on 2023-06-13; License: CC BY 4.0