<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="1"?>
<pra datepubli="2021-04-11" lastupdate="2021-04-11">
 <uuid>56db2b57-4616-4c19-bb9e-9d146ea2b69d</uuid>
 <country>EU</country>
 <datepra>2021-01-28</datepra>
 <title>Scientific opinion on the import of Musa fruits as a pathway for the entry of non‐EU Tephritidae into the EU territory</title>
 <description><![CDATA[<p>Following a request from the European Commission, the EFSA Panel&nbsp;on Plant Health examined evidence as to whether the import of fruits of&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> (bananas and plantains) could provide a pathway into the EU for&nbsp;<em>Bactrocera dorsalis</em> (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae) or other non‐EU Tephritidae for which&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> is a host. Relevant scientific and technical information, including unpublished information provided to the EFSA Panel&nbsp;on Plant Health by the European Commission from research conducted in Cabo Verde, were taken into account. The majority of EU imports of&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> fruit comes from Ecuador, Colombia and Costa Rica where&nbsp;<em>B. dorsalis</em> does not occur. Commercial&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> fruits are harvested at &lsquo;green stage one&rsquo; before they begin to ripen naturally. Postharvest processes are designed to ensure that only high quality, unripe fruit are exported. Green stage one fruit are transported to the EU in controlled conditions and stimulated to ripen when exposed to exogenous ethylene in ripening rooms in the EU. There is no evidence that any Tephritidae can naturally infest commercial varieties of&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> fruit at green stage one or earlier. When experimentally infested with eggs of Tephritidae, larvae fail to develop in green stage one fruit. Physical and chemical changes that occur during fruit ripening enable&nbsp;<em>B. dorsalis</em> and 11 other species of Tephritidae to oviposit and develop in&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> at later stages of fruit development. Reports of&nbsp;<em>B. dorsalis</em> or other Tephritidae infesting bunches of&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> fruit are a consequence of the fruit being left to develop beyond green stage one in the field. There is no evidence that commercially grown fruits of&nbsp;<em>Musa</em>, for export to the EU, provide a pathway for the entry of non‐EU Tephritidae. Passengers bringing&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> fruit from countries where Tephritidae can infest ripened&nbsp;<em>Musa</em> fruit do however provide a potential pathway for the entry of non‐EU Tephritidae into the EU territory. </p>]]></description>
 <author id="49">
  <fullname>Virag  Kertesz (EFSA)</fullname>
  <institute id="8">European Food Safety Authority</institute>
 </author>
 <tags>
  <tag>commodity PRA</tag>
 </tags>
 <organisms>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRBR">Bactrocera bryoniae</organism>
  <organism eppocode="DACUDO">Bactrocera dorsalis</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRFA">Bactrocera facialis</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRFR">Bactrocera frauenfeldi</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRJA">Bactrocera jarvisi</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRKA">Bactrocera kandiensis</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRKI">Bactrocera kirki</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRKR">Bactrocera kraussi</organism>
  <organism eppocode="DACUMU">Bactrocera musae</organism>
  <organism eppocode="BCTRNE">Bactrocera neohumeralis</organism>
  <organism eppocode="DACUTR">Bactrocera tryoni</organism>
  <organism eppocode="CERTCO">Ceratitis cosyra</organism>
  <organism eppocode="1TEPHF">Tephritidae</organism>
 </organisms>
 <hosts>
  <host eppocode="1MUBG">Musa</host>
 </hosts>
 <praarea>
  <area isocode="9L">EU</area>
 </praarea>
 <files>
  <file type="1" size="0">
   <title>link</title>
   <url>https://pra.eppo.int/getfile/b7533408-71ea-4108-aeba-da8b54e05cfd</url>
  </file>
 </files>
</pra>
