Adapting Stored Product Entomology for New Research Challenges: Advancements in Functional Genomics, Chemical Ecology, and Beyond On-Demand Presentations
Climbing ability of khapra beetle larvae on artificial household and insecticide-treated materials
Entomologist USDA-APHIS Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts
The khapra beetle, Trogoderma granarium is a serious pest of stored grains in many nations. Larvae of T. granarium larvae may be persistent in warehouse conditions due to the ability to enter facultative diapause. Thus, a better understanding of their behavior may leaded to improvements in the development of monitoring tools and other control technologies. The distance that khapra beetle larvae will walk on a variety of surfaces at different angles was examined for 10-minute intervals. Certain surfaces such as plywood, sheetrock, tile, cement, and netting were much more easily climbed than plastic, painted cement, and metal. Movement would often increase when the surface inclination increased from 0° to 30°, but then decrease at 60° or 90°. Tape corridors promoted climbing, and those with paper-like surfaces such as masking tape or lab labeling tape provided the most benefit. Other tapes with slippery or textured surfaces did not promote climbing. We also tested the ability to move on plastic bag and netting material impregnated with insecticide at different angles. Regardless of insecticide treatment, plastic bags were much less amenable to larval movement than netting. At the same time, there was little effect of the insecticide itself on slowing movement in these brief trials. The results are discussed in the context of optimal placement of wall traps used for monitoring and the development of new control technologies.