Affiliation:
1. ADAS, Woodthorne, Wergs Road, Wolverhampton, UK
Abstract
Nuisance-causing flies were studied in and around a West Midlands, UK, landfill site from mid-January 2003 to mid-January 2004. The most important species was the common housefly, Musca domestica, which made up more than 92% of the total catch on traps in premises and was also frequent on the landfill site. An estimated 2 million common houseflies were imported to the site in waste as eggs, larvae or pupae during the peak month, July. Most did not apparently survive to maturity, only about 20 000 per month emerging from the tipped refuse. Lesser houseflies ( Fannia canicularis) were also very commonly imported but they seemed unable to survive the conditions on the tip in their immature stages and few were found in emergence traps. No correlation was found between the distance separating premises from the landfill site and the number of M. domestica trapped in those premises. White sticky traps were effective for monitoring changes in fly populations over the longer term whereas the Scudder grill was more useful for making objective ‘snapshots’ of fly activity. There is scope to improve both the monitoring of fly activity and the investigation of complaints made by the general public about flies.
Subject
Pollution,Environmental Engineering
Reference10 articles.
1. Busvine, J.R. (1951) Insects and Hygiene; The Biology and Control of Insect Pests of Medical and Domestic Importance in Britain. pp. 156–160. Methuen & Co Ltd, London .
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