Wireworm populations in relation to crop production: I. A large‐scale flotation method for extracting wireworms from soil samples and results from a survey of 600 fields
- 1 May 1945
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Applied Biology
- Vol. 32 (2) , 148-163
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7348.1945.tb06774.x
Abstract
The wireworm survey in the Eastern Counties revealed many cases where the observed wireworm damage failed to correspond with the estimated field population. A possible explanation for this was the inaccuracy of counts made by picking wireworms out of the soil samples by hand. Tests showed that such methods recovered an extremely variable proportion of the wireworms in the‐ samples and, on the average, only two‐fifths of the larvae were obtained. A modified form of the washing and flotation technique used by Salt & Hollick (1944) was introduced for large‐scale work and is described. By this method, ten samples of soil (4 in. diam. and 6 in. deep) bulked together are examined at a time and can be dealt with at the rate of 13 samples per man per hour with an efficiency of 95‐100% in the extraction of wireworms. The populations estimated on 600 fields sampled between December 1942 and May 1943 have thrown more light on the size and composition of the wireworm population in grass and arable fields. Inspection of the crop results on fields tested by the washing process showed a much closer relationship between wireworm population and wireworm damage than had been obtained by the hand‐sorting method in the previous year.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies of wireworm populationsAnnals of Applied Biology, 1944
- INVESTIGATIONS ON WIREWORMS: INTRODUCTORYAnnals of Applied Biology, 1942
- WIREWORM POPULATIONS AND THEIR EFFECT ON CROPSAnnals of Applied Biology, 1941
- A NEW APPARATUS FOR SEPARATING INSECTS AND OTHER ARTHROPODS FROM THE SOILAnnals of Applied Biology, 1936