Why the government drops flies on California
Chapters10
Introduces the medfly threat to California crops and the basic idea of releasing sterile flies to prevent infestations.
Tom Scott explains why California releases millions of sterile fruit flies each day to outcompete wild medflies and protect crops, detailing the science, logistics, and quarantine safeguards behind the program.
Summary
Tom Scott dives into the Mediterranean fruit fly dilemma facing California and explains why government agencies periodically release sterile flies. He outlines how medflies devastate crops by laying eggs in fruit and how a two-year trial in the mid-1990s showed zero infestations when sterile flies were released. The program now operates over roughly 1,750 square miles, breeding males in safe zones, sterilizing them with radiation, and tagging them with a UV marker dye. Scott walks through the production line: 24 million sterile males per day, a volumizer to distribute pupae, incubation with agar feeding, and a ginger oil boost to improve mating success. When released from aircraft at about 2,000 feet and 161 mph, these sterile males mate with wild females, producing eggs that never hatch, thereby preventing population explosions. He notes the careful maintenance of colonies offshore to avoid accidental escapes and describes the massive detection network of ~100,000 traps that distinguish sterile from wild flies. The program relies on frequent releases—every three to four days—to maintain effective density across the landscape. Finally, Scott highlights the measurable success: infestations dropped from seven or eight per year to around one per year, making the costly program a bargain relative to an established medfly invasion.
Key Takeaways
- The program targets 1,750 square miles by releasing roughly six to nine million sterile male flies per release, six to twelve towers at a time, every three to four days.
- Sterile flies are produced at 24 million per day, irradiated to be sterile, dyed with UV marker, and released from aircraft traveling around 2,000 feet above ground at 161 mph.
- Eggs from matings between sterile and wild males do not hatch, effectively halting the medfly population growth in treated areas.
- A Volumizer and incubation setup concentrate pupa in trays, with a center-ward migration of flies to food and water agar before being released.
- Freshness and viability are critical: releases occur consistently to prevent wild females from finding mates, maintaining biological birth control across thousands of square kilometers.
- California maintains ~100,000 exotic fruit fly traps statewide to detect and delimit any infestations quickly and adjust the release strategy.
- The program has reduced annual infestations from 7–8 to about 1, demonstrating a favorable cost-benefit compared to uncontrolled medfly spread.
Who Is This For?
Essential viewing for agricultural policy enthusiasts, pest-control professionals, and anyone curious about large-scale biological control methods in practice—especially those interested in how sterile insect techniques work in real-world settings.
Notable Quotes
"The plan is, breed male flies in areas where it's safe to do so, because they're already established. Sterilize the flies when they're in the pupal stage with radiation, and tag them with an ultraviolet marker dye."
—Outlines the core method used to create sterile males and how they are prepared for release.
"To be clear, irradiating something does not make that thing radioactive! But it does make the flies sterile."
—Clarifies a common misconception about irradiation and reinforces the safety of the technique.
"If female medflies that have arrived in shipping containers or the post or travelers' baggage mate with these, the eggs will never hatch, which means there's nothing burrowing through the fruit to destroy it, and no population explosion."
—Explains the genetic rationale behind using sterile males to prevent population growth.
"The aircraft are traveling at 161 miles per hour when they're releasing. So the volume of those flies are distributed fairly evenly throughout the target area."
—Describes the mechanics and geometry of the aerial release process.
"Big numbers are scary, but I did the maths, and they're aiming to have a density of about one sterile fruit fly every 20 to 40 square meters across thousands of square kilometers of Californian cities and farmland."
—Gives a concrete density target to illustrate how distributed the release is across the landscape.
Questions This Video Answers
- How does sterile insect technique prevent crop pests like medflies from spreading in California?
- Why are tens of millions of sterile fruit flies released over LA and surrounding areas?
- What happens to sterile fruit flies after they're released and how is success measured?
- What quarantine measures exist to detect medfly infestations in California?
- Could releasing sterile insects harm the environment or non-target species?
Mediterranean fruit flySterile insect techniqueBiological pest controlFruit fly quarantineCalifornia agricultureTom ScottPest management logistics
Full Transcript
- The Mediterranean fruit fly, or medfly, is an invasive pest in California. Medflies lay their eggs inside fruit and breed incredibly fast. They can devastate crops. But today, and almost every day, aircraft hired by the California and federal governments are going to drop millions of them over Southern California, and over the Los Angeles metro area specifically. There is a really good reason for this. - California experienced recurring infestations from 1987 to 1994. So in 1994, California began a two-year test to determine if releases of sterile flies as a preventative measure would reduce the size and scope of the infestations.
And during that two-year test period, California experienced zero infestations. So in 1996, the Medfly Preventive Release Program began, and the program currently today is 1,750 square miles. - So the plan is, breed male flies in areas where it's safe to do so, because they're already established. Sterilize the flies when they're in the pupal stage with radiation, and tag them with an ultraviolet marker dye. To be clear, irradiating something does not make that thing radioactive! But it does make the flies sterile. Then they're shipped here, hatched, bundled up into planes, and dropped onto California, where their job is to outcompete any wild medflies that have made it to the area.
- We maintain our colonies offshore in areas where medfly is already established. 'Cause we don't want to risk that any flies escape our facility and start an infestation. We're sourcing approximately 24 million sterile males per day, seven days a week. Our staff inspect the flies for sterility, then they're poured into a hopper that sits above a volumizer. The volumizer measures out the desired amount of pupa and it will distribute it around the perimeter of each tray. When the flies emerge from the pupa, they'll migrate to the center of the tray, where there are two pieces of agar, which will serve as their food and water source during incubation.
So then they're stacked into towers, with our goal of placing one million pupa in each tower. Those towers are moved to an incubation room. After two days, most of the flies will start emerging. On the third day, we place one milliliter of ginger root oil under each tower. Ginger root oil contains a naturally occurring compound that increases the chance that those sterile males will have successful matings. - If female medflies that have arrived in shipping containers or the post or travelers' baggage mate with these, the eggs will never hatch, which means there's nothing burrowing through the fruit to destroy it, and no population explosion.
- We'll typically load six to twelve towers into a refrigeration trailer. The flies will enter a chill coma. So they'll essentially be immobilized. We have a specially engineered vacuum that will vacuum the empty pupa casings from the perimeter of each tray, but leave the flies in the center of the tray. We will process those adults and load them into the release box that's then transported to the aircraft. Those boxes contain anywhere from 50 to 130 pounds of flies, depending on the release area and the release rate. It's approximately six to nine million flies. - And while hundreds of millions of flies sounds like a huge amount, it's actually not that many over an area the size of Southern California.
- The aircraft are equipped with a release machine that has a AC unit that keeps the flies in an immobile state until release. Drop time can vary from 30 minutes to an hour. The aircraft are traveling at 161 miles per hour when they're releasing. So the volume of those flies are distributed fairly evenly throughout the target area. If you were to see the plane flying overhead, you would not see the flies falling from the chutes, especially at the altitudes that we release, which are typically around 2,000 feet above ground level. - Big numbers are scary, but I did the maths, and they're aiming to have a density of about one sterile fruit fly every 20 to 40 square meters across thousands of square kilometers of Californian cities and farmland.
That density is orders of magnitude less than all the insects already out there. And that includes the quarantine areas. We should talk about the quarantine areas. - California deploys approximately 100,000 exotic fruit fly detection traps throughout the state. The insect detection traps are collected from the field and they're transported to our identification unit. The flies are screened under a UV light, looking for the presence of the marker dye. So we're able to identify and differentiate a sterile fly from a wild fly. If we detect two wild medflies within three miles of one another, or a larva, a pupa, or a mated female, we will consider that an infestation.
And that triggers a response, so there will be increased "delimitation trapping" to identify exactly where that infestation's occurring. The rate of release of steriles will increase, as well as possibly fruit removal within a particular area. - As I record this, anyone growing fruit in more than 150 square kilometers of the LA metro area just can't legally sell it or even give it away, to avoid the chance of spreading the infestation. There are other larger quarantine areas out in the farmland that makes up a lot of this region. In theory, there is a possible video, titled, "I Released Two Million Fruit Flies over Los Angeles." And yes, I want to press that button.
But unfortunately, there isn't a spare seat on the plane. And plus the quarantine area includes under and around the approach paths to Los Angeles International Airport. So flying it is not an easy job and they do not want the distraction. But I can show you a shot from inside the release tubes as millions of fruit flies are slowly dropped over LA. - We always want to have fresh, viable flies distributed into those regions. So we're releasing every three to four days. The goal is to release sufficient numbers of sterile males into the environment to prevent any wild females that are introduced from finding a wild male and reproducing.
So it's essentially biological birth control. - Does it work? Well, in the area they're dropping flies, there used to be seven or eight infestations a year on average. Each one needing quarantine and pesticides and a huge amount of effort. Since they started the program? About one a year. Compared to the cost if medflies got established here, it's a pretty good deal.
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