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1 April 2013 Effects of Carbaryl-Bran Bait on Trap Catch and Seed Predation by Ground Beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae)
Dennis J. Fielding, Linda S. Defoliart, Aaron M. Hagerty
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Abstract

Carbaryl-bran bait is effective against grasshoppers without many impacts on nontarget organisms, but ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) may be susceptible to these baits. Carabids are beneficial in agricultural settings as predators of insect pests and weed seeds. Carabid species and their consumption of weed seeds have not been previously studied in agricultural settings in Alaska. This study examined the effect of grasshopper bran bait on carabid activity-density, as measured by pitfall trap catches, and subsequent predation by invertebrates of seeds of three species of weed. Data were collected in fallow fields in agricultural landscape in the interior of Alaska, near Delta Junction, in 2008 and 2010. Bait applications reduced ground beetle activity-density by over half in each of 2 yr of bait applications. Seed predation was generally low overall (1–10%/ wk) and not strongly affected by the bait application, but predation of lambsquarters (Chenopodium album L.) seed was lower on treated plots in 1 yr (340 seeds recovered versus 317 seeds, on treated versus untreated plots, respectively). Predation of dandelion (Taraxacum officinale G. H. Weber ex Wiggers) seeds was correlated with ground beetle activity-density in 1 yr, and predation of dragonhead mint (Dracocephalum parvifolium Nutt.) seed in the other year. We conclude that applications of carbaryl-bran bait for control of grasshoppers will have only a small, temporary effect on weed seed populations in high-latitude agricultural ecosystems.

© 2013 Entomological Society of America
Dennis J. Fielding, Linda S. Defoliart, and Aaron M. Hagerty "Effects of Carbaryl-Bran Bait on Trap Catch and Seed Predation by Ground Beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae)," Journal of Economic Entomology 106(2), 669-674, (1 April 2013). https://doi.org/10.1603/EC11343
Received: 3 October 2011; Accepted: 1 April 2012; Published: 1 April 2013
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KEYWORDS
Alaska
Conservation Reserve Program
grasshopper bait
high-latitude agriculture
Insecta
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