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A MECHANICAL TRAP FOR SAMPLING POPULATIONS OF SMALL, ACTIVE INSECTS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

D.R. Menzies
Affiliation:
Research Station, Agriculture Canada, Vineland Station, Ontario L0R 2E0
E.A.C. Hagley
Affiliation:
Research Station, Agriculture Canada, Vineland Station, Ontario L0R 2E0

Extract

It is difficult to estimate numbers of small active insects, particularly predators, in fruit-tree canopies because of the frequent and rapid movement of these species. The conventional method of sampling such populations requires tapping the branch to dislodge the insects which fall to a cloth tray from which they are recovered and counted. However, many species take to flight very rapidly and escape before identification is possible. A sampling method was required which would rapidly enclose a volume of the canopy without disturbing the resident population, thereby eliminating inaccuracies in the sample obtained. This note describes a remotely operated mechanical trap which can be placed on a limb in the tree canopy. The insects thus trapped can be immobilized, counted, and identified.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1977

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