Return
to Publications List                                                                                         ◄ Next Page►
 
| 9   METHODS AND
  PROCEDURES  Trapping            In order to obtain the desired
  number of earwigs to be used in laboratory experiments, it was  necessary to find proper methods for
  trapping them. The grooved board traps as used at Puyallup, Washington by
  Crumb and associates (1941) proved inadequate for trapping earwigs in a field
  experiment. The time of day, the degree of mechanical disturbance, wind
  velocity and moisture were factors that seemed to determine the total number
  of earwigs that could be found at any given time because they are free to
  enter and leave these traps at will. 
  Although the board trap served admirably in supplying earwigs for
  laboratory experimental purposes, a different type of trap was desired for
  use in field experiments where total number caught was an important factor.
  This kind of experiment called for a single-entry, no-exit type of
  apparatus.  A trap of this type was
  devised by using a pint sized mason jar to which an inverted wax paper cup,
  with its base removed, was firmly anchored by the ring part of the jar top
  (figure 1).  The inside of the jar was
  spread with peanut butter to serve as bait, after which it was buried in the
  ground to one-quarter inch of its top. 
  Entry could be made by even the smallest earwig nymph which might
  happen to be in the vicinity. The peanut butter scent attracted the insect to
  the rim where it fell down the sides of the paper cup and into the bottom of
  the jar.             After several trials with this
  kind of trap, it seemed that escapes could be reduced to a minimum by
  covering the bottom of the jar with a thin layer of whole wheat flakes and
  adding three or four milliliters of water from an eyedropper.    |