Customs and Border Protection Agriculture Specialists at the Otay Mesa Cargo Facility discovered harmful pests in a shipment of celery on January 16. Photo: U.S. Customs and Border Protection

By SDCN Editor

Otay Mesa CA–U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agriculture Specialists found something unusual while examining a shipment containing fresh celery, the interception of a rare pest, a first-in-port discovery.

A shipment containing fresh celery arrived at the Otay Mesa Cargo Facility on Jan. 16. During the initial inspection, a CBP officer referred the driver and cargo load for an intensive agriculture inspection.

At the inspection area, CBP Agriculture Specialists conducted thorough examinations and found one live chrysomelidae and one live lepidoptera within the shipment of celery. The pest was submitted to the United States Department of Agriculture Plant Protection and Quarantine Identifiers for further identification. The traveler and shipment were then returned directly to Mexico.

A lepidoptera pest was discovered by Customs and Border Protection Agriculture Specialists during an inspection at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry on January 16. Photo: U.S. Customs and Border Protection

On Jan. 18, the lepidoptera pest was identified by a local USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Entomologist as an actionable Copitarsia species. The chrysomelidae was also later identified by national specialists as actionable Isotes multipunctate (Jacoby). Per local USDA Agriculture Plant Protection and Quarantine Identifiers, the found qualifies as a “first-in-port” for Isotes multipunctate (Jacoby) in the Otay Mesa Cargo Facility.

“Foreign insects, plant and animal diseases, and invasive plants can be harmful to United States agriculture. It is an important part of the CBP mission to identify and stop pests and diseases at the border prior to entering the country,” said Rosa Hernandez, Customs and Border Protection Otay Mesa Port Director.

Officials say this is not the first time finding this pest nationwide, it is a first-time discovery of this pest at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry. The CBP has made efforts to prevent invasive species from entering the United States. They encourage travelers to declare all agricultural items to a CBP officer upon arrival.