Abstract

Simple SummaryRice stored in warehouses is frequently attacked by rice weevils, which must therefore be controlled. We developed an electrostatic method as an alternative to pesticides. An arc discharge exposer (ADE) kills insects entering an electric field. The apparatus has pairs of identical metal plates, one of which is linked to a voltage generator for negative charging, the other is grounded. A −7 kV electric field forms between the two plates. When an insect enters the electric field it is arced by the charged plate and killed. We combined this method with a technique that lures insects hiding in rice grains. When a vessel containing rice and insects was rotated and then returned to the initial position, the weevils climbed up the vessel walls and entered the ADE. Dead insects were collected to minimize rice contamination. This method efficiently killed pests in stored rice.We developed an arc discharge exposer (ADE) that kills rice weevils nesting in dried rice. The ADE features multiple identical metal plates, half of these are linked to a voltage generator and the others are grounded. The plates were arrayed in parallel and an electric field formed between them. Any insect entering the field was arced from the negatively charged plate and killed. The ADE was placed on a vessel containing pest-infested rice grains; the insects were lured out of the grains by mechanically vibrating the vessel. When rice grains move, insects tend to climb upward, thus, the weevils were effectively removed. Our electrostatic apparatus is easy to construct and could be used to control pests in stored rice.

Highlights

  • Rice has been organically cultivated without pesticides

  • Antennae appear capable of detecting repulsive electric force; antennal electrons are disrupted by electrostatic induction [22]

  • Our preliminary study revealed that the arc-discharge exposure was effective to kill other major stored-product pests, such as the cigarette beetle (Lasioderma serricorne), red flour beetle (Tribolium castaneum) and Azuki bean weevil (Callosobruchus chinensis), and that the present vibration-luring/arcing method was applicable to control maize weevils (Sitophilus zeamais) nesting in stored rice grains

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Summary

Introduction

Rice has been organically cultivated without pesticides (herbicides, fungicides, and insecticides). Adult weevils live for 4–5 months and each female lays 300–400 eggs during this period. The female uses her strong mandibles to chew holes in grain kernels, in which she deposits single eggs and seals the holes with a gelatinous fluid. Infestations remain frequent and fumigation is often inevitable [3,4,5,6] This is both difficult and costly; fumigants are very toxic to humans and must be applied skillfully. A non-insulated charged conductor produces a discharge-generating electric field in which coronal and arc discharges occur depending on the distance and potential difference between the two conductors [7]

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