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Single fly found in Fremont causes county-wide produce quarantine

A large swath of Alameda County is now under a quarantine for the invasive Mediterranean fruit fly after agriculture officials recently discovered one mated female in Fremont. 
The quarantine area is 71 square miles and defined by state Highway 84 in the north, the Alameda-Santa Clara county border in the south, the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge in the west and on the east by Calaveras Creek.
During the quarantine, produce grown in the area should stay in the area — this applies to farmers, wholesalers, retailers and home gardeners, according to officials from the California Department of Food and Agriculture.
Produce can be consumed on the property where it was grown or, if infected, can be placed in a double bag and thrown into a trash bin, not green waste.
In order to eradicate the pest, sterile male medflies will be released in the area at the rate of 250,000 males per square mile per week in a 39-square-mile area around the infestation. 
Also, properties within about 650 feet of infested areas are being treated with an organic pesticide and fruit will be removed from areas with about 330 feet of properties with mated females, larval detections or multiple adult detections, according to CDFA officials.
The mated female medfly was found in a trap on Aug. 28 and it’s unclear how long the quarantine will last.
The last medfly quarantine in Alameda County was in 1981.
Medflies will infest more than 250 types of fruits and vegetables and people who think they might have an infestation can call the state’s Pest Hotline at (800) 491-1899 or email [email protected].
State officials say most invasive pests arrive in this country by people illegally bringing back produce from travels abroad. For more information about how to avoid causing an infestation, people can review the USDA’s “Don’t Pack a Pest” program at www.dontpackapest.com/.

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