In this work we investigate the possibility of transporting material to the NEO region via the 8:3 MMR with Jupiter, potentially even material released from the dwarf planet Ceres. By applying the FLI map method to the 8:3 MMR region in the orbital plane of Ceres, we were able to distinguish between stable and unstable orbits. Subsequently, based on the FLI maps (for mean anomaly M = 60 • and also M = 30 • ), 500 of the most stable and 500 of the most unstable particles were integrated for 15 M yr for each map. Long-term integration in the case of M = 60 • showed that most of the stable particles evolved, in general, in uneventful ways with only 0.8% of particles reaching the limit of q ≤ 1.3 AU . However, in the case of M = 30 • , a stable evolution was not confirmed. Over 40% of particles reached orbits with q ≤ 1.3 AU and numerous particles were ejected to hyperbolic orbits or orbits with a > 100 AU . The results for stable particles indicate that short-term FLI maps are more suitable for finding chaotic orbits, than for detecting the stable ones. A rough estimate shows that it is possible for material released from Ceres to get to the region of 8:3 MMR with Jupiter. A long-term integration of unstable particles in both cases showed that transportation of material via 8:3 MMR close to the Earth is possible.