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Field trials with a presistent stomach insecticide against populations of the red locust, Nomadacris Septemfasciata (Serv.), in an outbreak area

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

G. J. W. Dean
Affiliation:
International Red Locust Control Service, Abercorn, Northern Rhodesia.

Extract

In its potential outbreak areas in Northern Ehodesia and Tanganyika, sexually immature populations of adults of Nomadacris septemfasciata (Serv.) tend to concentrate in the islands of grass that remain unburnt after the annual fires that occur during the dry season. The locusts use the tall grasses as roosting sites and descend in the daytime to feed on adjacent short grasses, where these occur as constituents of an internal mosaic within the islands, or, in the case of islands composed wholly of tall grasses, on the fresh grass-shoots on the burnt-over ground surrounding them.

Two methods are described whereby emulsified solutions of dieldrin were applied in the Central Bukwa plain, Tanganyika, in 1960 as a stomach poison at dosages of 2·9 and 4·5 oz. active ingredient per acre from aircraft to the whole of individual islands showing the internal mosaic pattern (4 trials) or at 2·9, 4·5 and 8·2 oz. per acre to a swath 20 or 40 yd. wide around the perimeter of tall-grass islands (8 and 4 trials, respectively). Results were assessed by counting the numbers of locusts flushed by a vehicle driven along strips parallel to one another and 0·1 mile apart, and checked by counts of dead locusts. Mortality reached at least 90 per cent, within four days, at either dosage, following the first method, and 21–89 per cent, within 14 days following the second, being significantly greater at the higher dosages but not with the wider swath.

These results are compared with those obtained in preceding years by the standard method of applying DNC from aircraft at 20 per cent, in oil as a contact insecticide; in the latter case, the cost of insecticide was more per acre sprayed, but less per 1,000 locusts killed because the density (5 locusts per sq. yd. of grass island) in the trials was greater than in those using dieldrin (1 per 3 sq. yd.). Even so, when dieldrin was used, many more locusts were killed per sortie flown, and the total cost (of flying plus insecticide) per island was much less, and per 1,000 locusts killed very much less, than in the standard method, which nevertheless has to be used against mobile swarms because DNC is quick acting.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1963

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