On warm summer days they buzz over the fruit bowl and scatter in the kitchen: fruit flies. They love ripe fruit and bacteria and yeast fungi. The dipterans are annoying, but also harmful to health? Biologist and insect expert Mark Benecke explains.
The clock can be set by you: as soon as it gets warmer, small flies cavort near fruit bowls. “Drosophila” – better known as fruit flies – should annoy many people. They spread quickly and containing them on summer days seems impossible.
Biologist and insect expert Mark Benecke urges calm. These fruit flies are not only harmless, but can also be kept away with a few tricks, as he explains to the mirror.
Benecke: “Do the flies smell it from afar”
Researchers suspect that fruit flies come from South Africa. As with many insect species, they were likely distributed around the world via exports and imports. Strictly speaking, the fly is still distributed in this way: if you discover fruit flies in the kitchen, you probably brought them in with your last week’s shopping. This is because they lay eggs on fruit or are attracted to individual animals from outside.
“If there is open vinegar, wine or fruit lying around, the flies can smell it from afar,” explains biologist Benecke. If the temperature rises above 25 degrees, fruit flies feel good – and start to multiply.
Fruit flies love bacteria and fungi
However, if it gets too hot, say more than 30 degrees, no reproduction takes place. It must not be too cold either – below 10 degrees. Benecke explains in an interview with Spiegel that the animals have no chance of surviving in the dry. Accordingly, they lay their eggs in overripe fruit to feed their maggots. The dipterans feed primarily on bacteria, yeast or other fungi that are found on overripe or even rotten fruit.
However, fruit flies do not pose a health risk, as Benecke emphasizes. “They are so small, the amounts of bacteria that they could carry at all are tiny compared to a human hair, let alone a finger.” Only the fruit can rot faster because the animals distribute small spores.
Don’t forget the drain cleaning
If you don’t want to eat fly eggs, you should wash your fruit thoroughly, says Benecke. The biologist advises cleaning fruit baskets, organic waste and the drain regularly, as leftover food can attract the animals there. Empty bottles and cans should also be disposed of regularly. Fruit can be protected by a cover. More on the topic: Make your own fruit fly trap: This is how you can get rid of fruit flies
“As soon as the flies run out of food, they’re gone quickly,” says the insect expert, who finds fruit flies “fascinating.” What many people probably don’t know is that fruit flies are social creatures and, as researchers have discovered, share some characteristics with humans. For example, some have sleep problems or suffer from depression and alcoholism. The insects can also become lonely.
Source used: mirror
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