Sex, radiation and mummies: How farms are fighting a pesky almond moth without pesticides

Los Angeles Times 

In a windowless shack on the far outskirts of Fresno, an ominious red glow illuminates a lab filled with X-ray machines, shelves of glowing boxes, a quietly humming incubator and a miniature wind tunnel. While the scene looks like something straight out of a sci-fi movie, its actually part of an experimental program to prevent a damaging almond pest from successfully mating. With California almond growers reeling from dropping nut prices and rising costs, the pests have only added to their woes. Every year, the navel orangeworm eats through roughly 2% of California's almonds before they can make it to grocery store shelves. Last year, it was almost double that.

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