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14 In the
field experiment, technical difficulties necessitated rather high application
rates, and all chemicals were applied at the rate of four pounds active
ingredient per acre. Field experiment using granular
insecticides During the course of
the summer, it soon became obvious that a large concentration of evenly
distributed earwigs would be difficult to find; but luckily one heavy
infestation occurred in an irrigated truck garden in Young Ward, Utah and became
especially serious on garden vegetables,
namely, potatoes, tomatoes and celery, toward the latter part of July. This site
was chosen for a field experiment, using granular forms of
aldrin, chlordane, dieldrin and heptachlor. Each of the four chemicals was applied as granules to
four 200 square-foot plots at the rate of four pounds per acre. Chlordane,
dieldrin and heptachlor were applied with a small rotary hand duster
calibrated to a fixed walking pace. Aldrin had to be applied by hand in order
to effect a four-pound per acre treatment. These treatments were made on August 3rd in the afternoon between the hours of two
and four; and traps were put out (five per plot) between four and six of the
same afternoon. The granules had
little opportunity to contact earwigs before six o'clock, as they are not
active and exposed during the daylight hours. The traps
were removed the following morning and taken to the laboratory for a nymphal and adult count. They were replaced in the field in the afternoons of August
5th, 12th and 28th, with counts being made each succeeding morning. Four
control plots were scattered throughout the area, well away from any of the treated plots. Counts from these
controls constituted |