The present invention relates to a system i.e. apparatus, and method to produce attractants for use in insect traps to increase the effectiveness of said traps.
The prior art contains an extensive array of insect traps and attraction methods. A common method is to use ultraviolet light to attract insects to a high voltage electrocution grid, or to an adhesive trapping board.
Chemical attractants are also known. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,543,181 describes a fruit fly attractant composition comprising: a volatile short chain carboxylic acid, a volatile short chain alcohol, a volatile aryl substituted alcohol, and a nitrogen compound. This document also describes other insect attractants and a portion of the Background Art section of that document is reproduced below verbatim.
“In U.S. Pat. No. 5,490,349, issued Feb. 13, 1996, to Muramatsu, there is disclosed an insect trap which contains a liquid insect attractant which is fully enclosed so that the trap may be shipped without spillage or loss. The trap includes an enclosure which provides a funnel shaped portion terminating in a substantially translucent nipple. The insect trap may be commissioned into service by piercing the nipple thereby creating an inlet into the interior chamber through which insects will be drawn by the liquid attractant. The nipple is formed by a thermal process so that the walls of the inlet are drawn thin creating translucent walls which form a bright spot of light larger than the inlet's opening, thereby making it difficult for trapped insects to find the opening and gain freedom. Except for the terminal portions of the inlet, the enclosure is substantially opaque so that the contents of the insect trap are not visible to the public.
There exists a commercial product that is believed to be an embodiment of the above U.S. Pat. No. 5,490,349, which consists of a small plastic vessel-type trap with a small hole in the top, and named “Natural Catch®0 Plus Fruit Fly Trap”. The liquid attractant used in the trap is believed to be primarily vinegar, which is referred to hereinafter as “Anderson's solution.” In U.S. Pat. No. 5,464,626, issued Nov. 7, 1995, to W. Warren, et al., there is disclosed a method for attracting the insect species Culex nigripalpus, Aedes atianticus, Culex salinarius, Aedes vexans, Culex spp., Simulium spp., Psorofeta ferox, Aedes infirmatus, Drosophila melanogaster, Coccinellidae, Anopheles crucians, Psoroferia columbiae, Culicoides spp. and Aedes spp., using a compound having a dimethyl substituted oxymethyl cyclohexane derivative structure. This attractant finds utility primarily as a bait enhancer for acute toxins and/or trapping devices.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,008,107, issued Apr. 16, 1991, to C. Warren, et al., there is disclosed a novel attractant composition for use with synanthropic flies (the so-called ‘filth flies’ such as the house fly) which includes indole and skatole, a pheromone, trimethylamine hydrochloride, and a suitable carrier.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,106,821, issued Aug. 22, 2000, to Baker et al., there is disclosed (house) fly attractant compositions that comprise at least one volatile short chain carboxylic acid, at least one organic sulfide, and at least one nitrogen heterocycle. In a preferred embodiment the composition additionally comprises at least one ammonia-releasing compound. In a particularly preferred example, the composition is prepared by combining, for example, the carboxylic acid, the organic sulfide and the nitrogen heterocycle. The invention also relates to an insect trap comprising a means for retaining flies and an insect attractant composition of this invention. The trap is useful in commercial, residential and livestock facilities.”
As should be relatively clear in light of the number and variety of the attractants available, not all attractants act on a broad spectrum of insects and some are not effective at all. According to the invention defined in U.S. Pat. No. 6,543,181, the attractant is formed of three volatile components and is designed to vaporise at ambient temperature. This leads to evaporation of the liquid and the need to re-fill the trap.
All of the attractants described in the prior art are combinations of specific chemicals, usually synthetic, seeking to produce a chemical combination that attracts the insects by simulating their food, sex pheromones or other attractive substance, usually specific to a target species. However, insects have sophisticated chemoreception capabilities and even well-designed combinations of chemicals are unable to accurately reproduce the full effects of the naturally existing scents they aim to mimic.
Wild insects produce a wide variety of complex chemical mixtures, some of which have the effect of attracting other insects, such as sex or aggregation pheromones.
The inventors have recognised problems with known solutions for attracting insects. Such solutions use certain chemicals that are attractive to the target insect but are unable to fully replicate the complex combinations of chemicals that occur naturally and this limits the effectiveness of the known attractants with respect to potency, longevity or efficacy.
This and other aspects will be apparent from the embodiments described in the following. The scope of the present disclosure is not intended to be limited by this summary nor to implementations that necessarily solve any or all of the disadvantages noted.
The present invention comprises a system and method to produce an attractant for use in insect traps where the attractant comprises or consists of biological material produced through the husbandry and/or processing of insects.
Attractants produced from the insects themselves can fully replicate the natural scents that the synthetic attractants in the art seek to mimic; this can enable a much more effective attraction of the target insects to a trap.
It should be noted that in this context an insect trap is not limited to devices that physically confine insects that enter; any device that detects, confines, immobilises or kills insects by any means is considered to be within the scope of the term “trap” used herein.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure there is provided a system for the manufacture of a substance attractive to one or more species of insect. The system comprises a housing containing a live population of insects. The system may further comprise a sub-system to allow nutrients, food and/or water to be provided to the insects. The system may further comprise a sub-system to remove organic matter from the housing. The system may further comprise a sub-system to sterilise the removed material to prevent any ongoing biological activity in the attractant.
The system may further comprise a preparation sub-system to prepare the organic matter into a form appropriate for use as an attractant.
The preparation sub-system may comprise a mechanism to mash or pulps the organic matter.
The system may be configured to produce an attractant from all of or selected parts of insects
The system may be configured to produce an attractant from secretions from the insects
The system may be configured to produce an attractant from sterilised insect eggs
The system may be configured to product an attractant from one or any combination of flies, beetles, bedbugs, moths, bollworms, termites, ants, wasps, hornets, social insects.
The system may be configured to produce an attractant from insects which are the prey of the insects to be attracted.
The system may be configured to produce an attractant from insects which are the same species as the insects to be attracted.
The system may further be configured so that the population of insects is housed in a temperature-controlled environment.
The system may further be configured to sterilise the organic matter by means of heat, cold or radiation to prevent ongoing biological activity in the organic matter.
The system may be further configured to produce an attractant for use in an insect trap or detector.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure there is provided a method for producing a substance attractive to one or more species of insect characterised by: housing a population of live insects; providing any combination of nutrients; food or water to the live insects; removing organic matter from the population and sterilizing the removed organic matter
The method may further be characterised by separating the live insects from the organic matter
The method may further be characterised by heating, cooling or irradiating the organic matter.
The method may further be characterised by producing a substance that is attractive to one or any combination of flies, beetes, bedbugs, moths, weevils, bollworms, termites, ants, wasps, hornets, social insects.
The present disclosure provides a method, apparatus and system that are practical, inexpensive and allow production of an attractant from the natural biochemistry of insects.
The present disclosure also provides a system/hardware for a trap utilising the novel attractant.
Although the present disclosure is described with respect to presently preferred embodiments relating to the production and use of attractants, it is understood that the features of the present disclosure can be applied to any application requiring the attraction of insects.
The method, apparatus and system enables the production of attractant from the anatomy of insects or their waste. Such attractants may be produced from, but are not limited to, whole insects, casts, eggs, shed skins, excreta or other secretions.
The method, apparatus and system enables to production of a biologically sterile attractant by means of sterilisation. Such sterilisation includes, but is not limited to, heat, cold, ionising radiation and electromagnetic radiation.
The present disclosure generally relates to the production of attractants for use in pest control, and more particularly, but not exclusively, relates to techniques for producing attractants for use in pest traps.
Embodiments will now be described by way of example only.
Referring to
Referring to
In other embodiments the production cells may be removable from the temperature controlled chamber and the entirety of their contents sterilised and prepared as attractant. This embodiment is advantageous as an inexpensive system where the entire mass of the insects is effective as an attractant and where the age of the insects is not significant, such as where the insect in the production cell is the prey of the insect to be attracted.
In another embodiment, material is continuously removed from the production cell by means of a conveyer or other continuous system, such as is shown in
Referring to
A corresponding method may involve providing material e.g. a strip of material at a non-zero angle to the horizontal e.g. as defined by a base of the housing. The method may additionally or alternatively involve passing the (strip of) material though the housing. The method may additionally or alternatively involve using the feeding sub-system to deliver food onto the (strip of) material. The method may further involve harvesting a product of the insects from the (strip of) material; the product may be e.g. eggs, faces, skin/exoskeleton, or other insect product. The collected product, either on/associated with that (strip of) material of after removal from the material, may then be sterilized.
In other embodiments the production cell the system may include the ability to separate mature insects from the production cell for processing into attractant. This may be accomplished by, but is not limited, means of graded sieves to separate larger insects from smaller.
The techniques described herein may also be used with arachnida in particular acari such as mites and ticks.
No doubt many other effective alternatives will occur to the skilled person. It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the described embodiments and encompasses modifications apparent to those skilled in the art lying within the spirit and scope of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1800495.2 | Jan 2018 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2019/050079 | 1/11/2019 | WO | 00 |