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A STUDY OF THE BIOLOGY AND CONTROL OF ANISOPUS FENESTRALIS (SCOPOLI, 1763), A FLY ASSOCIATED WITH SEWAGE FILTERS
Authors:H A HAWKES
Institution:Birmingham Tame and Rea District Drainage Board, Rookery Park, Erdington, Birmingham 24
Abstract:In work on the control of the sewage fly Anisopus fenestralis (Scopoli, 1763), it was shown that the larval phase was considerably lengthened by limiting the food supplied. The effects of food supply and temperature are considered in relation to the incidence of the adult fly in the filters. The assessment of the fly population of sewage filters by tray traps, as previously used by other workers, was investigated. Both light and temperature were found to affect the number of A. fenestralis entering the trays: it is concluded that although the trays do not accurately assess the A. fenestralis population of a bed, nor measure the rate of emergence from the bed, they are of value in assessing the relative effect of different control measures. In the filters the period of maximum abundance was during the spring, followed by a period of reduced numbers throughout the summer, with a recovery in the autumn giving relatively high numbers throughout the winter. Emergence of A. fenestralis from the filters is influenced by climatic factors, especially temperature and light; a diurnal variation in the rate of emergence was also observed. Because of this effect of temperature on emergence, the flies were only present above the filters in the warmer periods of the year; and because of the reduced numbers in the filters in the summer, the flies were only abundant above the beds during the spring and early summer and in the autumn. BHC applied as a water-dispersible powder was more effective than in the form of an emulsion. It was also most effective when used against the larval phase.
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