The 'apple maggot' (''Rhagoletis pomonella''), also known as 'railroad worm', is a pest of several
fruits, mainly
apples. The adult form of this insect is about 3/16 of an inch long, slightly smaller than a house fly, with a white dot on its thorax and a characteristic black banding shaped like and "F" on its wings. The larva, which is the stage of this insect's life cycle that causes the actual damage to the fruit, is similar to a typical fly larva or maggot. Other "worms" inside apples can be confused with the apple maggot, however
caterpillars often feed in the apple’s core while apple maggots feed on the fruit flesh. In infested fruit, the larvae are often difficult to detect due to their pale, cream colour and small body size. The maggot stage has many enemies, including several
braconid wasps: ''Utetes canaliculatus'', ''
Diachasmimorpha mellea'', and ''
Diachasma alloeum''.
The adult stage lays its
eggs inside the fruit; before the arrival of apples from
Europe, it was found mainly in
hawthorns. The young "worm" that hatches consumes the fruit (rarely will the larva leave the fruit while it is still hanging on the tree), and causes it to bruise and decay and finally drop before ripening. The insect overwinters as a pupa in the soil. It only emerges after
metamorphosis into a relatively defenseless fly. It uses
batesian mimicry as a method of defense - its coloration ressembles to the forelegs and pedipalps of a
jumping spider (family
Salticidae).
[1] Adults emerge from late June through September, with their peak flight occurring in August.
Evolution
''Rhagoletis pomonella'' is significant evolutionarily in that the race of this species that feeds on apples spontaneously emerged from the
hawthorn feeding race in the 1800 - 1850 AD time frame after apples were introduced into North America. The apple feeding race does not now normally feed on hawthorns and the hawthorn feeding race does not now normally feed on apples. This constitutes a possible example of an early step towards the emergence of a new species by the mechanism of
sympatric speciation.
[2]
Notes and References
1. Ecology, , Robert E. and Gary L. Miller, Ricklefs, W.H. Freeman and Company, 2000,
2. Reference for emergence of new race of apple maggot flies [1]
External links
★
Popular Account Bugs of Wormy Apples, Part 2 Copyright © 1999 by Louise Kulzer
★
Ohio State University Fact Sheet
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Apple Maggot Fly Traps - Ladd Research