| Literature DB >> 26454479 |
José-Arturo Solórzano1, Jeremie Gilles2, Oscar Bravo1, Cristina Vargas1, Yannery Gomez-Bonilla1, Georgina V Bingham3, David B Taylor4.
Abstract
Pineapple production in Costa Rica increased nearly 300-fold during the last 30 yr, and >40,000 hectares of land are currently dedicated to this crop. At the end of the pineapple cropping cycle, plants are chopped and residues incorporated into the soil in preparation for replanting. Associated with increased pineapple production has been a large increase in stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans (L.), populations. Stable flies are attracted to, and oviposit in, the decomposing, chopped pineapple residues. In conjunction with chemical control of developing larvae, adult trapping is an important control strategy. In this study, four blue-black fabric traps, Nzi, Vavoua, Model H, and Ngu, were compared with a white sticky trap currently used for stable fly control in Costa Rica. Overall, the white sticky trap caught the highest number of stable flies, followed by the Nzi, Vavoua, Model H, and Ngu. Collections on the white sticky trap increased 16 d after residues were chopped; coinciding with the expected emergence of flies developing in the pineapple residues. During this same time period, collections in the blue-black fabric traps decreased. Sex ratio decreased from >7:1 (females:males) 3-7 d after chopping to 1:1 at 24-28 d. White sticky, Nzi and Vavoua traps collected similar numbers of colonizing flies 3-7 d after residues were chopped. However, white sticky traps collected more flies once emergence from the pineapple residues began. Although white sticky traps collected more flies than fabric traps, they remain labor intensive and environmentally unsound because of their disposable and nonbiodegradable nature. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Entomological Society of America 2015. This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the US.Entities:
Keywords: Nzi; Stomoxys calcitrans; Vavoua; mass trapping
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26454479 PMCID: PMC4626667 DOI: 10.1093/jisesa/iev127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Fig. 1.Traps. (A) Vavoua, (B) Nzi, (C) Model H, (D) Ngu, and (E) white sticky.
Fig. 2.Summary of stable fly collections and weather conditions during study period. Stable flies are total daily collections of the five traps combined. Temperatures (°C) are daily average and range. Precipitation is daily total in mm.
Mean daily S. calcitrans trap catches and sex ratios
| Trap | Catch/day | % ♀ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95% CI | 95% CI | |||
| White sticky | 140a | 113 –173 | ||
| Nzi | 57b | 46 –71 | 73a | 70 –75 |
| Vavoua | 44bc | 35 –55 | 72a | 69 –75 |
| Model H | 31c | 25 –38 | 71a | 67 –74 |
| Ngu | 17d | 14 –22 | 81b | 77 –86 |
Means followed by the same letter within a column do not differ (α = 0.05).
Fig. 3.Mean daily trap collections for four time periods after chopping of pineapple residues.
Fig. 4.Sex ratio for flies collected in four fabric traps (pooled) relative to time after chopping of pineapple residues.