Agriculture (Jun 2024)

Design of and Experimentation with a Suction-Based Pest-Capture Machine for the Tea Pest <i>Empoasca vitis</i>

  • Yu Han,
  • Zhiyu Song,
  • Wenyu Yi,
  • Caixue Zhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14060964
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. 964

Abstract

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To investigate an effective physical pest control method for tea trees, we designed and manufactured a suction-based pest-capture machine (hereafter labeled the “pest vacuum”) and conducted a test and field experiment to evaluate its effectiveness in the control of Empoasca vitis Göthe (E. vitis). Based on the proposed model, the minimum practical air velocity of the pest vacuum was 5.85 m s−1. The field experiment included two treatments and a blank control. In treatment 1, we used the pest vacuum along tea trees only once, while in treatment 2, the pest vacuum was used along trees twice, separately, in 2 consecutive periods, and with an interval of more than 30 min. The results show that a highly significant difference arose among the dropping rates of the two treatments and the blank control instantly after suction, a significant difference among the dropping rates 7 days later, and no significant difference 14 days later. The dropping rate and the effective rate of prevention of treatment 2 reached 81.87% and 80.60% instantly after suction. Moreover, the effective rate of prevention of nymphs was slightly higher than that of adults. Overall, the pest vacuum had a prominent, albeit short-term, effect on the control of E. vitis. Seven days after the suction, it is better to repeat the suction five days after the first suction. The pest vacuum provides a valid physical method for pest control, so more attention should be paid in future investigations to reducing the weight and working noise of the pest vacuum.

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