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ExoSex Bait- A New Product to Control
Crop Eating Insects
Description and Advantages
Professor Philip Howse of the School of
Biological Science at Southampton University, Southern England
has developed a technique called ExoSex Bait Station, which
can be used to control crop-eating insects.
The technique is non-toxic to humans,
environmentally friendly and does not result in insect developing
natural resistance. It is an effective substitute to chemical
sprays or blanket pheromone mating - disruption treatments.
Electrostatic powder is used to coat insect with pheromone,
a slow-acting (natural) pesticide. Each type of trap contains
a pheromone specific to the target insect and by simply changing
the pheromone the trap can be configured to catch a different
insect. About 12 insect species have so far been tested with
this technique in field trials in the United Kingdom, South
Africa and New Zealand. The trap houses a plate containing
a series of small wells filled with a female pheromone. The
male of the species is attracted by the female pheromone and
as it takes off inside this trap the down drought creates
cloud of charged particles of the pheromone, a slow-acting
but natural pesticide. ExoSex is a low-cost system, made of
laminated cardboard or plastic. It is a simply constructed
and assembled design which can be easily configured for different
target insect species.
Source: PTI
Science Service, December 1-15, 2000,

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