NEWS FLASH
CBP stops pest on flower shipment in Phoenix
Jul 8, 2009
CBP stops
pest on flower shipment in Phoenix
U.S.
Customs and Border Protection and the
Department of Agriculture said they stopped
a potentially destructive plant pest in a
shipment of fresh orchids from Thailand that
arrived in the Phoenix airport on June 29.
The
agencies identified the pest as Thrips palmi
(or melon thrips). The USDA said it was the
first time melon thrips had been discovered
on a shipment of cut flowers arriving at a
port of entry in Arizona, and the first time
in more than 17 years that this pest has
been found on an international shipment
destined for Arizona through another part of
the country.
CBP said
the flowers were fumigated to kill the pest
and allowed to continue to their
destination.
The melon
thrips feeds on more than 200 different
varieties of ornamental and agricultural
crops, including onions, peppers, melons,
cucumbers, soybeans, cotton, lettuce,
tomatoes, potatoes, orchids and sunflowers.
The pest is a major threat in many countries
in Asia, South and Central America, and
Europe. In the United States, it has limited
distribution in Florida and Hawaii.