Wireworm traps are being set around Nova Scotia to identify what species of click beetle we have here.
Showing posts with label trap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trap. Show all posts
Wireworm Managment with Dr. Christine Noronha
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Wireworm traps are being set around Nova Scotia to identify what species of click beetle we have here.
NELT Wireworm Traps
Friday, May 6, 2016
The Noronha Elaterid Light Trap (NELT). |
In an attempt to manage the wireworm problem, a new device has been invented by Dr.
Christine Noronha, an Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada entomologist. The NELT
(Noronha Elaterid Light Trap) trap is composed of a solar-powered garden lamp,
a small cage, and a white plastic cup. The cup is filled with a few centimetres of water with
a few drops of dish soap. The white cup is buried in the soil so
that the lip is level with the ground, and the light shines into it. The light attracts the click beetles (both male and female) that emerge from the ground
in May and June. The beetles fall into the cup and drown. Last year in one field, Dr. Noronha caught 3,000 females in ten of her traps. Each female beetle can lay 100-200 eggs, so every death counts!
Note proximity of light to cup. |
Similar solar power lights can be found fairly inexpensively at your local garden store. |
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