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Trapping of Small Organisms Moving Randomly

Principles and Applications to Pest Monitoring and Management

  • Book
  • © 2015

Overview

  • The most comprehensive treatise on trapping ever produced from highly theoretical and fundamental research to very practical applications to all of agriculture
  • This book communicates complex concepts in language understandable by readers across a wide range of educational backgrounds
  • This book offers a number of important new equations for ecology and pest management
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: SpringerBriefs in Ecology (BRIEFSECOLOGY)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This new book is the first to make logical and important connections between trapping and foraging ecology. It develops and describes—both verbally and mathematically--the underlying principles that determine and define trap-organism interactions. More important, it goes on to explain and illustrate how these principles and relationships can be used to estimate absolute population densities in the landscape and to address an array of important problems relating to the use of trapping for detection, population estimation, and suppression in both research and applied contexts. The breakthrough nature of subject matter described has broad fundamental and applied implications for research for addressing important real-world problems in agriculture, ecology, public health and conservation biology. Monitoring traps baited with potent attractants of animals like insects have long played a critical role in revealing what pests are present and when they are active. However, pest managers have been laboring without the tools necessary for quick and inexpensive determination of absolute pest density, which is the cornerstone of pest management decisions. This book spans the gamut from highly theoretical and fundamental research to very practical applications that will be widely useful across all of agriculture.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Entomology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA

    James R. Miller, Christopher G. Adams

  • School of Agricultural and Wine Sciences, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga, Australia

    Paul A. Weston

  • Department of Mathematics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA

    Jeffrey H. Schenker

About the authors

Dr. James R. Miller serves as Distinguished Professor of Entomology at Michigan State University. Dr. Miller’s research centers on insect reproductive physiology, behavior, and chemical ecology. Current basic research projects address mechanisms of moth pheromone disruption, sensory physiology of pheromone reception and host-plant acceptance by herbivorous Diptera.

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