Trapping as a means of studying the game tsetse, Glossina pallidipes Aust.
- 1 November 1960
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Bulletin of Entomological Research
- Vol. 51 (3) , 533-557
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007485300055152
Abstract
In an area of sleeping sickness due to Trypanosoma rhodesiense in Uganda, Morris's ‘ animal ’ traps were used to study the activity and the relations with habitat and hosts of the vector, Glossina pallidipes Aust., a tsetse difficult to sample by conventional fly-round methods.This type of trap was found to give samples both numerically greater and more truly representative of the tsetse population present than did either fly-boys or Chorley's bicycle screen.Black traps showed an over-all superiority to brown traps, greatest during the rains and disappearing in the dry season, and this was related to the tsetse being attracted by the trap as representing a natural host.Keywords
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