Bottle trap for insects

Bottle trap is a name used for several different objects. Among these are a piece of material used in bathroom plumbing, as well as various traps that are made out of discarded bottles and which are used to trap animals as different as beetles, mice, fish and octopuses. This article is about the use of modified bottles to trap flying insects.

In this context, a bottle trap is a type of baited arboreal (placed in a tree) insect trap widely used for collecting either prized or harmful fruit-eating beetles, especially flower beetles.[1][2], leaf chafers and longhorn beetles[2] as well as wasps[3] and other unwanted flying insects.

Contents

Structure

A bottle trap is an insect trap made out of a plastic bottle. Most collectors use bottles of 1.5 or 2 liters to make these traps but smaller bottles are sometimes used as well.[4] There are basically two types:

Bait

Many different types of bait are used. Since this kind of trap is mainly used for beetles that are attracted to (over)ripe fruits, baits with a certain amount of alcohol are usually very effective. Types of bait which are commonly used are:

Other fruits are sometimes used as well, but banana is most often used since it is widely available, normally inexpensive and contains suffient sugar to start a fermentation process by itself. The different ingredients are usually kept apart and mixed in the trap itself, but some collectors prefer to mix their bait before going into the field.

Placement

Bottle traps (like all traps) yield best in places where more of the desired insects are to be expected. For beetles, in general this means high up in trees, especially flowering or fruiting trees. Other places in which traps are often placed with good results include forest borders.[2][6] Traps placed inside forests usually yield smaller numbers of beetles, but also different species. Traps for luring wasps are usually set up a short distance (several meters) from the place where they are bothersome.

There are various methods used for placing bottle traps:

The first three methods are used most often for collecting beetles, while the latter two are more commonly in use for catching wasps.

Bycatch

Next to the desired beetles, many other insects may find the bait attractive. Sap beetles (a group of small fruit-eating beetles), moths like the large white witch moth, various butterflies[4], cockroaches, flies, stingless bees, wasps and even small fruit eating bats[2] may enter the bottle traps as bycatch while the collector aims for beetles. Such unwanted animals in the trap may cause the collector several problems:

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.unl.edu/museum/research/entomology/Newsletter/Scarabs36.pdf
  2. ^ a b c d e http://pagesperso-orange.fr/serge.mallet/piegeaE.html
  3. ^ a b http://www.wisebread.com/pesky-pests-easy-homemade-mosquito-and-insect-traps-and-repellent
  4. ^ a b c d e http://www.unl.edu/museum/research/entomology/Newsletter/Scarabs21.pdf
  5. ^ http://science.naturalis.nl/gassomiracle#5
  6. ^ a b http://www.unl.edu/museum/research/entomology/Newsletter/Scarabs29.pdf