Pheromone trap may replace sweep net

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: November 1, 2001

SCOTT, Sask. – Owen Olfert pushes into the ground a stake capped with what appears to be a small, bright green plastic birdhouse.

But it’s really a trap for the orange wheat blossom midge, and the researcher at Agriculture Canada’s research centre in Saskatoon hopes it will replace the sweep net.

Olfert said he has known for years about the sweep net’s shortcomings.

Farmers now use it to sweep their fields in mid-evening, when the midge are most active. Farmers count the number of midge they catch to determine if spraying is warranted.

Read Also

From left New Brunswick agriculture minister Pat Finnigan, PEI minister Bloyce Thompson, Alberta minister RJ Sigurdson, Ontario minister Trevor Jones, Manitoba minister Ron Kostyshyn, federal minister Heath MacDonald, BC minister Lana Popham, Sask minister Daryl Harrison, Nova Scotia Greg Morrow and John Streicker from Yukon.

Agriculture ministers commit to enhancing competitiveness

Canadian ag ministers said they want to ensure farmers, ranchers and processors are competitive through ongoing regulatory reform and business risk management programs that work.

“Too time consuming for already busy farmers,” Olfert said.

“Especially if you have a lot of land or it is spread out.”

He hopes his trap will change the way farmers monitor their midge. It uses sex pheromones recently developed at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.

The pheromones lure the midge into the traps, which are mounted on crop-high stakes in the field.

Once inside the traps, the midge stick to adhesive.

The new traps will be tested on the Prairies during the coming crop year.

“We know the bait system works,” he said.

“Now we need to establish the relationship between the number of midge caught in the traps and the population in the field.”

He expects that the trap will be ready for sale to producers in the spring of 2003.

About the author

Michael Raine

Managing Editor, Saskatoon newsroom

explore

Stories from our other publications