Pitfall traps. Ground-dwelling arthropods, particularly
ants, ground beetle adults and larvae, can be collected or sampled
using pitfall
traps. These are basically jars or other suitable containers buried
in the ground so that insects walking on the ground fall in. Occasionally,
collectors place a funnel in the top of the container to reduce the
likelihood of escape or evaporation fluid in the containers. In addition,
some collectors place a tile or similar object on top of the trap to
make it more attractive to crawling insects, or increase yield by construction
metal or wooded “baffles” or walls in an “X” configuration
with the container buried in the center.
Containers
can be clean or have inner vertical surfaces coated with a “slick” material
preventing escape such in the cockroach trap or a light dusting of talcum (baby)
powder. Alternatively, they can be partially filled with a fluid such as soapy
water or Anti-Freeze. Anti-Freeze is attractive and highly toxic to animals such
as dogs, so care must be taken when using this materials. However, is does not
evaporate, allowing traps to be placed for extended periods of time before retrieving
specimens collected.
Baited vials. Collection and monitoring of certain groups
of insects, particularly ants, can be accomplished using baited vials. Simply,
suitable containers such
as vials, condiment cups or test tubes are placed on their sides on the ground
and an attractive substance is placed in the vial. Attractants are selected
on their attractiveness to the groups being collected or studies. For grease-feeding
ants, peanut butter, hot dog (processed meat) pieces, soybean or olive (vegetable)
oil-soaked pieces of index cards are commonly used. For sugar-feeding ants,
cookies
such as “pecan sandies” have been used. Even a simle vegetable
oil-soaked piece of an index card (1 by 1 inch) makes an attractive baited
card sampler!
Malaise
Traps. Many flying insects fly straight up to the light when
disoriented or panicked. Malaise traps take advantage of this behavioral
reaction. One design uses a vertically-hung semi-transparent screen into
which insects fly. When they hit the screen they fly up, only to be trapped
in a tent-like top. Although insects trapped in the top can then be removed
by hand or using a jar, most commercially-available models have collecting
chambers at the top corners which are jars with a funnel leading into
the that prevents escape (similar to a lobster or minnow trap). Heat
or some type of chemical (such as a vapona or DDVP strip) in the jar
immobilizes insects. Traps with collecting heads can be left for periods
of time and visited only to remove specimens.
Varieties and modification of Malaise traps exist. The tee pee
trap is used by collectors of biting flies like horse and deer
flies (Tabanidae). These
generally use a shiny-black painted beach ball and dry ice (or octenol)
as attractants, although black borders along to bottom edge
of the tee pee also
attract them.
Epps
Biting Fly Trap. These are commercially-produced traps for collecting horse
and
deer flies to reduce population levels locally by “trapping
out” biting adult stages (Horselineproducts.com, 1-800-208-4846).