Period of effective catching of insect pests and natural enemies in light traps
-
Published:2023-06-30
Issue:1
Volume:4
Page:12-16
-
ISSN:2582-8053
-
Container-title:International Journal of Agricultural and Applied Sciences
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:IJAAS
Author:
Kabir M. M. MoniruzzamanORCID, , Ali Md. Panna, Datta Juel, Topy S. N., Debonath A., Nasif Saifullah Omar, Roy Tapon Kumar, Uddin ABMA, , , , , , ,
Abstract
Light trap helps to protect natural enemies and manage destructive insect pests in rice farming ecosystem. Light trapping time at night is not identified, for organic farming in farmers level its essential to identified proper timing at night. The experimental light trap was set up at Sagordi rice farm, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute, Barishal, during T. Aman rice season in 2019-2020. The time of catching insects by light trap were divided in six different times in a night and defined as treatments (T1= 17.20 to 18.20, T2= 18.20 to 19.20, T3= 19.20 to 20.20, T4 =20.20 to 21.20, T5=21.20 to 22.20, T6= 22.20 to rest of night insects caught at light trap) in this study. Each treatment has had four replications. Yellow sticky trap used to catch and trapped insect and natural enemyRice insect pests and their natural enemies were counted and recorded manually. The caught of yellow stem borer increased and green leafhopper were decreased from treatment, T1 to treatment, T6. During dusk to first four hours, the percentage of caught was approximately 69.28% insect pests. Overall, the percentages of insect pests trapping were 89.65% and natural enemies were 10.35% during the experimental period. The ratio of destructive insect pests caught was highest compared to that of natural enemies in light trap of rice ecosystem.
Publisher
Agricultural & Environmental Technology Development Society
Reference23 articles.
1. Ali, M.P., Kabir, M.M.M., Haque, S.S., Qin, X., Nasrin, S., Landis, D., Holmquist, B. and Ahmed, N. 2020a. Farmer's behavior in pesticide use: Insights study from smallholder and intensive agricultural farms in Bangladesh. Science of the Total Environment, 747, p.141160. 2. Ali, M.P., Nessa, B., Khatun, M.T., Salam, M.U. and Kabir, M.S. 2021. A way forward to combat insect pest in rice. Bangladesh Rice Journal, 25(1), pp.1-22. 3. Ali, M.P., Kabir, M.M.M., Haque, S.S., Afrin, S., Ahmed, N., Pittendrigh, B. and Qin, X. 2020b. Surrounding landscape influences the abundance of insect predators in rice field. BMC Zoology, 5(1), pp.1-12. 4. Axmacher, J.C. and Fiedler, K., 2004. Manual versus automatic moth sampling at equal light sources-a comparison of catches from Mt. Kilimanjaro. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 58(4), pp.196-202. 5. Aktar, W., Sengupta, D. and Chowdhury, A., 2009. Impact of pesticides use in agriculture: their benefits and hazards. Interdisciplinary toxicology, 2(1), pp.1-12.
|
|