As global trade increases, invasive insects inflict increasing economic damage to agriculture and urban landscapes in the United States yearly, despite a sophisticated array of interception methods and quarantine programs designed to exclude their entry. Insects that are hidden inside soil, wood, or stored products are difficult to detect visually but often can be identified acoustically because they produce 3–30-ms, 200–5 000-Hz impulses that are temporally grouped or patterned together in short bursts. Detection and analysis of these sound bursts enables scouts or inspectors to determine that insects are present and sometimes to identify the presence of a particular target species. Here is discussed some of the most successful acoustic methods that have been developed to detect and monitor hidden insect infestations. Acoustic instruments are currently available for use in rapid surveys and for long-term monitoring of infestations. They have been useful particularly for detection of termites, coconut rhinoceros beetles, red palm weevils and Asian longhorned beetles in wood, white grubs and Diaprepes root weevil in soil, and stored product insects.
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October 2011
Meeting abstract. No PDF available.
October 01 2011
Eavesdropping on coconut rhinoceros beetles, red palm weevils, Asian longhorned beetles, and other invasive travelers Free
Richard W Mankin
Richard W Mankin
USDA-ARS-CMAVE, 1700 SW 23rd Dr., Gainesville, FL 32608, [email protected]
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Richard W Mankin
USDA-ARS-CMAVE, 1700 SW 23rd Dr., Gainesville, FL 32608, [email protected]
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 130, 2536 (2011)
Citation
Richard W Mankin; Eavesdropping on coconut rhinoceros beetles, red palm weevils, Asian longhorned beetles, and other invasive travelers. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 October 2011; 130 (4_Supplement): 2536. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.3655133
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