Abstract

Stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans, is a biting fly that can cause severe irritation to livestock resulting in reduced productivity. The most common method of monitoring S. calcitrans is through the use of sticky traps and many designs have been developed using different colours and materials such as alsynite fibreglass and polypropylene sheeting. Laboratory experiments and some field experimentation have demonstrated that colour contrast can attract S. calcitrans. However, this response has not been fully utilised in trap design. To test that simple colour contrast could increase trap efficacy, white sticky traps were mounted on three differently coloured backgrounds (white, yellow, and black) and positioned at five sites on a mixed livestock farm. White sticky traps on a black background caught significantly more S. calcitrans than the yellow or white backgrounds. An incidental result was that Pollenia sp. were caught in greater numbers on the yellow framed traps. The reasons for S. calcitrans attraction to black–white contrast are most likely due to conspicuousness in the environment although the extent to which flies are using this feature as a host-location cue or a perching site are unknown.

Highlights

  • Stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans (L.) (Diptera: Muscidae), is a cosmopolitan haematophagous fly that frequently attacks livestock in farmyards

  • Traps consisted of white sticky traps 225 × 400 mm (Oecos, Kimpton, UK) attached to 4-mm thick twin-walled polypropylene sheet (Corriboard®, NI-Plastics, Downpatrick, Northern Ireland)

  • There was no difference in the sex ratios of S. calcitrans caught on different colour framed traps (F statistic = 0.77, df = 2, 36, P = 0.471)

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Summary

Introduction

Stomoxys calcitrans (L.) (Diptera: Muscidae), is a cosmopolitan haematophagous fly that frequently attacks livestock in farmyards. In Northern Ireland, there is anecdotal evidence to suggest that their populations are increasing; perhaps due to greater availability of breeding sites, such as discarded silage, feedstuffs, and soiled bedding, following intensification of agricultural practices. S. calcitrans is considered the most important economic ectoparasitic pest of cattle in the US, with annual losses greater than $2 billion [1] In addition to their nuisance impact, S. calcitrans is a potential mechanical vector of equine infectious anaemia, lumpy skin disease, and others. They are an intermediate host for stomach worms (Habronema spp.) [2]

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