Transcript Document

Where the Rubber Meets
the Road
Creative Pest Control “On the Fly”
Session Goals
• Stimulate sharing of information among military
entomologists of creative solutions used for
pest control problems. Let this session be just
the beginning . . .
• Promote establishment of centralized database
where these and future creative solutions can
be incorporated for easy access to military
entomology community.
LT Elizabeth Dykstra
NDVECC Bangor
Non-Scientific Poll of Army & Navy
Entomologists Regarding Use of
MREs for Pest Control
• 12 Responded to MRE Survey
(~13% Total Army & Navy Entomologists)
– Army: n=8 (8/60 = ~13% response)
– Navy: n=4 (4/31 = 13% response)
Potential Pest Control Items in MREs
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Peanut Butter
Cheese Spread
Pound Cakes
Main Entrees
Drink Mixes
Crackers
Jelly/Jam
•Chocolate Cookie Bar
•Oatmeal Cookies
•Tootsie Rolls
•Granola Bars
•Egg-Based Entrees
•Plastic Spoons
•Cardboard MRE Case
•Plastic MRE Pouch
Peanut Butter
• Rodent Bait
• Works great as attractant when placed in middle of glue
board
• More effective than cheese spread as bait
P.B.
Peanut Butter
• Rodent Bait
- Cons
• Too messy; too runny and soft
• Can be eaten from the trap without setting it off
Counteract by applying or wrapping in gauze strip
• Takes too many packets and is popular with troops
– (Complaints about people like LTC O’Guinn who
keep eating bait with crackers => uses up bait in
non-mission essential ways)
– Increases risk of fragging incidents
Cheese Spread
• Rodent Bait
• Not as attractive to rodents as Peanut Butter
• Dries out on trap and screws up trap
mechanisms
• Popular item with troops and not as easily
obtained
Tootsie Rolls
• Use in Mouse Traps
– The key is to put it
UNDER the lever
and not on top so the
mice get the full
force of the trap
without stealing the
bait.
– Mice can’t steal this
as easily as they can
the P.B.
Other Successful Rodent Baits
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Granola type Bars
Poppyseed Pound cake
Chocolate Cookie Bar
Oatmeal Cookies
Other Successful Rodent Baits
• Crackers
• Jellies & Jams
Other Successful Rodent Baits
• For desert rodents
– Fresh fruit works
well; Try the MRE
fruit too.
Drink Mixes
• Filth fly attractants
Pros
– Not real attractive to
flies
Cons
– Can blow away unless
sprinkled onto sticky
tape e.g. duct tape
Drink Mixes
• Use as sugar solution in
water bottle fly bait
Note: Not as effective as
something stinkier
Main Entrees
• Use for raccoon (and skunk?) bait.
• Allow to “ferment” in sun and use for filth fly
attractant.
Egg-Based meals
• Filth Fly Attractant
Mix with water and
allow to sit for a few
days in the sun for
attracting filth flies
Plastic Spoons
• Use to measure small
amounts of fly bait or
dry pesticides.
• Be sure to label “For
Pesticide Use ONLY”
Plastic MRE Pouch
• Temporary holding bag
for rodents or other
creatures
• Short term dry ice
holder – wrap with duct
tape and paper (e.g.
paper towels) to
increase insulation.
• Container for small
equipment or trash
Cardboard MRE Case
• Use cardboard to make
an expanded trigger on
rodent traps
• Darken inside of box or
cover with dark cloth and
use as Mosquito Resting
Box.
• Dry Ice holder
– Wrap well with Duct Tape,
punch small holes in sides
and hang near trap.
Cardboard MRE Case
• Trap for small rodents or birds
(Gives a bored Marine something to do)
Cardboard MRE Case
• Use as holding pen for
captured creatures
Negative (and Other) Reports
Not Attractive to Rodents
• Beef Sticks
• Peanuts
• Fruit / Nut mix
• Crushed crackers mixed with grape jelly
Other
• Belief that MREs can be used as effective, fastacting non-lethal stomach poisons for just
about anything, except soldiers and Marines.
Beyond MREs . . .
Mosquito Resting / Attractant Areas
• Paint or cover with a
dark cloth a box of
some sort (ammo box,
MRE case, whatever).
• Mosquito netting with
animal underneath as
bait
Eye Gnat Control
• Noticed that gnats were
attracted to roadkill crabs.
• Put rotting fish parts in
cups, then covered with
netting and put fly bait on
netting.
• Gnats attracted to rotting
fish, fed on fly bait, and
successfully killed.
“In-a-Pinch” Dry Ice Trap
• Use a section of mosquito netting or cloth stockinette
(from Medical).
• Form tube with embroidery hoops (or something
similar) on both ends to keep length of tube spread
open.
• Hang well sweated sock or sock with dry ice from top
end so that bait hangs inside tube.
• Tie off top so that top end is closed off; leave bottom
end open.
• Hang out over night or for specified time.
• Collect mosquitoes at end of surveillance time.
Cautions on
Sticky Tape for Fly Control
•Beware of using commercial sticky tapes in hot
temperatures – coating will melt and drip off tape,
thereby losing stickiness.
Does not go over well in mess tents if coating drips onto
tables.
•Sand and dust storms will coat tape and reduce or
eliminate stickiness and hence effectiveness.
Acknowledgements and Thank Yous
to the Following Contributors:
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COL Terry Klein
CDR Mike Bangs
LTC Eric Milstrey
LCDR George Schoeler
LCDR Dan Szumlas
LCDR David Lavender
MAJ Jennifer Caci
LT Fred Stell
•CPT Michael Hiett
•CPT Jittawadee Murphy
•1LT Lewis Long
•HMC(SW) Gary Yestingsmeier
•HM1 (ret) Mike Elam
•Mike Medina
•Jim Dennett
•Dave Hedges
Comments? Contributions?
LT Elizabeth Dykstra – [email protected]