Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T01:30:40.398Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Aircraft Applications of Insecticides in East Africa. I.—Preliminary Experiments in Areas supporting Populations of the Tsetse Fly (Glossina palpalis (R.-D.))

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

K. S. Hocking
Affiliation:
Colonial Insecticide Research Unit, Arusha, Tanganyika.
D. Yeo
Affiliation:
Colonial Insecticide Research Unit, Arusha, Tanganyika.

Extract

Preliminary experiments are described of applications from aircraft of coarse sprays and coarse aerosols. The experiments were carried out over dense forest areas containing the tsetse fly G. palpalis.

At dosages of 0·2 lb. per acre of the p,p'isomer of DDT, or 0·032 lb. per acre of the γ isomer of BHC, both the sprays and the aerosols were relatively ineffective, and significant kills were obtained only with the aerosols.

The sprays were ineffective not only because they did not penetrate the canopy, but also because the nominal dosage was in any case too small to produce lethal deposits upon vegetation.

Much of the aerosol was filtered out by the upper layers of the canopy. The meteorological conditions in the area were also unsuitable for the application of aerosols, and much of the insecticide did not reach the canopy, but was blown away from the treated area.

It is concluded that aircraft applications of insecticide against G. palpalis are wasteful of insecticide, and would be very costly if substantial reductions in fly population were to be obtained. If insecticides are to be of value in such areas, ground methods of applying them would be almost certainly more effective, and less costly.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1953

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Gunn, D. L. & other. (1948 a). Locust control by aircraft in Tanganyika. 153 pp. London, Anti-Locust Res. Cent.Google Scholar
Gunn, D. L. & other. (1948 b). Anti-Locust Bull., no. 4, 121 pp.Google Scholar
Jackson, C. H. N. (1944). Ann. Eugen., 12, pp. 176205.Google Scholar
May, K. R. (1945). J. sci. Instrum., 22, pp. 187195.Google Scholar
Symes, C. B., Hadaway, A. B., Barlow, F. & Galley, W. (1948). Bull. ent. Res., 38, pp. 591612.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Du Toit, R. & Kluge, E. B. (1947). Vet. Rec., 59, pp. 569574.Google Scholar