from Down East Magazine
Buzzing for Bucks
In Machias, blackflies have become a natural resource.
It was a Jon Stewart moment. Or maybe a John Belushi. Last summer the Maine Blackfly Breeders Association, a Machias-based charity that admires all things blackfly with tongue firmly in cheek, received a letter from an Arizona laboratory asking for blackflies. Lots of blackflies. Dead, dry blackflies. For which it was willing to pay money.
It seems the lab thought the breeders association was actually in the insect cultivation business. "This is not an opportunity we can pass up, right?" offers Holly Garner-Jackson, a longtime member of the Down East group. "We first wrote back a very funny letter saying that we don't normally condone the killing of innocent blackflies, but since this was for scientific research . . . well, we want money, lots of money."
Spectrum Labs, Inc., found itself not quite sure how to take its new Maine blackfly supplier, but it was happy enough with the results that it wants more this year. So the association is lining up members and local residents who own bug zappers to collect the several ounces of blackflies Spectrum Labs uses in veterinary research on animal sensitivity to the little bug's bite.
Garner-Jackson says last year's request came too late in the season for the group to collect the full hundred grams the lab originally requested. ("Do you know how many blackflies that is? A lot!" marvels Garner-Jackson.) For one thing, the zappers were overwhelmed by mosquitoes that had to be hand-sorted from the smattering of blackflies. Still, the insects they did send were enough to earn the group a hundred dollars, "and we told them we'd definitely do it again this year," Garner-Jackson says. The money was part of the more than $6,000 the blackfly breeders raised and donated to local charities and AIDS research efforts last year.
Garner-Jackson quips that the association will have to expand its breeding stables to provide enough blackflies for the project. Or maybe the bid for sponsorship from the makers of the Mosquito Magnet will pan out. Until then, she says, "May the swarm be with you."
Only in Maine could someone make blackflies a sustainably harvested natural resource.