Apple magot - Ask Extension
We have apples with some apple magot tracks in them. We cut it away and waste a lot. Is this tracking harmful if some gets eaten?
Knowledgebase
Apple magot #810751
Asked September 14, 2022, 10:59 AM EDT
We have apples with some apple magot tracks in them. We cut it away and waste a lot. Is this tracking harmful if some gets eaten?
Morrison County Minnesota
Expert Response
We have apples with some apple magot tracks in them. We cut it away and waste a lot. Is this tracking harmful if some gets eaten?
The following web sites may be useful. Also someone asked this same question in 2015 and that reply is attached also.
https://extension.umn.edu/yard-and-garden-insects/apple-maggot
https://apps.extension.umn.edu/garden/diagnose/plant/deciduous/apple/fruitholes.html
Is it safe to eat apples with apple maggot trails? #277658
Asked September 12, 2015, 2:59 PM EDT
Is it safe or healthy to eat raw apples with some apple maggot trails in them? Attached is a photo of some slices. The apples are from an old unsprayed apple tree in the backyard of an unoccupied rental house in my neighborhood.Ramsey County Minnesota
Expert Response
If you can get past the ick-factor of finding an occasional worm, they are perfectly safe. Some people make applesauce or cider out of worm-ridden apples. But there is no reason they can't be eaten raw. The worms will not survive the acid drenching they'd get in your stomach.However, I'll add a couple of warnings. If the fruit is too far gone, or has dropped to the ground, I'd not eat it. The maggots might not make you sick, but bacteria in the rotting fruit, or something that entered the apple on the ground might. Furthermore, apple maggot larvae eventually turn the flesh mushy and unpalatable. And the fruit drops to the ground prematurely, before fully ripening.
Dennis White Replied September 12, 2015, 3:42 PM EDT